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Rock Islands
The Rock Islands are Palau's crowning
glory. More than 200 of these jungle-topped knobs of limestone dot the
waters for a 20 mile (35km) stretch south of Koror. Their bases, having
been worn away by tidal action and grazing sea creatures, are narrower
than their tops, causing them to look like emerald-hued mushrooms
rising from the turquoise sea. From the air, they're a knock out, and
flights from Koror to Angaur or Peleliu are worth taking just for the
view alone. But it's the waters surrounding them that make the Rock
Islands unique. Dive in and you'll find some of the most abundant and
diverse marine life to be found anywhere.
The Ngemelis Wall is widely considered to be the world's finest wall
dive. Starting in knee-deep water, it vertically drops off nearly 1000
ft (300m), showcasing a brilliant rainbow of sponges and soft coral
whose intense colors form the backdrop for quivering 9ft (3m) sea fans
and giant black coral trees. Blue Corner is the country's most popular
dive, where you can expect to be dazzled by an incredible variety of
fins and flippers, from schooling sharks and barracudas to soft and
hard coral.
Inland, Jellyfish Lake is a marine lake, popularized in the National
Geographic TV special Medusa, wherein millions of tiny stingerless
jellyfish float and bob in unison.
Some of the Rock Islands have soft, white-sand beaches to laze about on
after a dive, while others boast caves with dripping stalactites, rock
arches and underground channels; ancient rock paintings (on Ulong
Island); and half-carved Yapese stone money (in a cave near Airai
Channel). Oh yes, and crocodiles. More...
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