Scuba Diving
Scuba diving is an underwater activity in which people dive into the water with equipment to explore marine life, the environment or to perform various aquatic activities. Scuba diving can be a recreational, sporting or professional activity, depending on the purpose and depth of the dive.
Scuba diving requires special equipment, which includes a diving kit, tank, wetsuit, lead weights and other accessories. The dive kit includes a masks which makes able to watch under the water, and a snorkel through which divers can breathe at the surface. The tank contains compressed air, allowing divers to stay down underwater.
While diving, divers often encounter marine life such as fish, coral reefs, turtles and other aquatic creatures. They may also engage in a variety of diving activities, such as taking photos or videos underwater, exploring the deeper parts of the dive, or even wreck diving, where they dive on shipwrecks or underwater structures.
Diving is important from a safety point of view and requires appropriate training and experience. Divers need to learn proper diving and ascent techniques, breathing and pressure control, as well as possible emergency signals and diver rescue procedures. It is also important to follow diving rules and local marine environmental regulations to protect underwater life and the environment.