Santa Monica Rock
DEPTH: 20-70 FEET (6-21 M)
LEVEL: INTERMEDIATE TO ADVANCED
Located in open water, Santa Monica
Rock is an underwater pinnacle rising from the depths
to within 20 feet of the surface. It is named after
the Santa Monica, a 19th century wooden schooner whose
belly was torn open by the submerged rock, but which
managed to extricate itself, only to sink in shallow
water near St. John.
From the
south of the summit of the pinnacle a slow circumnavigation
of the rock formation
will reveal many different habitats: protected crevices,
current-caressed points and long rocky ridges. The
top is craggy and covered with delicate fire coral.
There is a fascinating round "sink hole" that
drops down 25 feet to a sandy bottom and is great fun
to explore. The southern side of the pinnacle is a
gorgonian and sea fan-covered wall. The clarity of
the water, the intriguing topography, and plentiful
marine life encounters make this a great dive and a
photographer's dream.
Seen here: pelagics, Atlantic
spadefish, horse-eye jacks, mackerels, kingfish,
barracuda, queen angelfish, black durgons, filefishes,
fairy basslets, groupers, turtle, nurse shark.
Text extracted from Diving
British Virgin Islands
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