These incredibly lush images show the dangerous caverns deep under the ocean, where few people have ever gone. They’re the work of underwater photographer Wes Skiles, who died July 21. We recently ...
With its turquoise waters and underground cave system spanning over 30,000 feet, Wes Skiles Peacock Springs State Park is a true natural wonder in Florida. Now named in memory of the late Wes Skiles - ...
RENOWNED UNDERWATER cave explorer and filmmaker Wes Skiles has twisted his way through hundreds of miles of submerged passageways over the past 30 years, but to make Water’s Journey: Hidden Rivers of ...
Wes Skiles, 52, a freelance photographer and cinematographer whose mystifying underwater images http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2010/08/bahamas-caves/skiles ...
Deep in the bubbling, turquoise waters of the Homosassa Springs, far below the gaze of curious tourists and cruising manatees, Wes Skiles and his crew are snooping where no human being has been.
WASHINGTON (June 24, 2011)—Three exceptional individuals and a corporation were honored by the National Geographic Society at its first ever "Evening of Exploration" gala event Thursday night, ...
Possibly the most important work Wes Skiles ever did in his deep career of underwater photography was unveiled Tuesday night with the screening of “Diving Deep — the Blue Holes of the Bahamas” at ...
Damn the national consensus that Florida is a freak state – we’re just special. And one of the things that make us so special is the flow of natural waters through our unique geography of underground ...
Orange Grove is a duckweed shrouded sink that offers a window into the Floridan aquifer at Wes Skiles Peacock Springs State Park.
Wes Skiles Peacock Springs State Park appears to be a murky pond but is a premier cave diving destination. The park offers hiking, picnicking, and swimming in addition to its famous underwater cave ...
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