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Dive the Shipwrecks of Lake Superior

Shipwreck Tours of Munising Michigan
offers Lake Superior Scuba Diving for beginning,
intermediate and expert divers. There is a
dive shop with rentals of dive equipment and
tank refills.

Captain
Peter Lindquist and his daughter Kate will
take you out on the 55' Fireball, the newest
addition to our fleet. The Fireball is 17'
wide and can be loaded up with 24 divers for
some great diving in the Alger Underwater Preserve.
Now family and friends can join the divers
for a great day on the water. The Fireball
has an upper sun deck, 2 heads, BBQ grill,
runs at 12 knots., and easy access to the water
.
 Morning,
afternoon, evening and night dives. Individual
and group rates. Dive shop and air service
at dock. Rental scuba equipment is available.

Primary scuba dive sites in Munising
Bay, Munising Michigan, in the Alger Underwater
Preserve:
The BERMUDA dive
site is a very popular for both beginners and
advanced scuba divers. A merchant schooner
of 394 tons, she was launched at Oswego, NY,
in 1860, and sunk with no loss of life in October
of 1870. Although this wreck lies in only 30
feet of water, it is protected from ice and
wave damage. The result is an intact 145 foot
schooner sitting upright and waiting for visitors.
The BERMUDA was 136 feet in length, 26 feet
in beam and l l feet, 9 inches in depth.
The HERMAN
HETTLER , a 235-foot
wooden steamer wrecked on Nov. 23. 1926,
was launched in 1890 at W Bay City, MI as
the steamer WALTER VAIL. The HETTLER was
laden with a cargo of table salt when she
encountered a typical November storm in 1926.
She was headed for the shelter of Grand Island,
near Munising, Michigan, when she struck
a reef along the island's west side and was
destroyed on the 23rd. All of her crew escaped
before the steamer broke up. In 30-40 foot
depths of outstanding visibility.
THE
KIOWA, a steel bulk
freight steamer of 2,309 tons and 251 feet
was launched in 1920 at Wyandotte, Michigan.
The KIOWA was blasted by a tremendous gale
on November 30, 1929. The shifting of her
unstable cargo of flax seed made her unmanageable,
and she went on an Au Sable reef, several
miles west of Grand Marais, Michigan. Five
lives were lost, but the other 16 crewmen
were saved in a courageous rescue effort.
The wreck is located in 20-40 foot depths.
THE
MANHATTAN , a wooden
bulk freight steamer of 1,545 tons, 252 feet
in length, launched in 1887 at Wyandotte,
Michigan, and sunk Oct. 26, 1903. She was
caught in a gale and seeking shelter in the
East Channel when her wheel chains broke
and she went up on a reef. Soon thereafter
a fire broke out and the ship was a sheet
of flame. Her crew escaped to safety. The
burned hulk is in 20-40 foot depths off the
east shore of Grand Island.
The STEVEN
M. SELVICK , a steel
tug of 70 gross tons, 71 feet in length and
19 feet beam was intentionally sunk off Trout
Point in May of 1996 for the Alger Underwater
Preserve. She lies in approximately 70 ft.
of water and is 1600 yards east of Grand
Island's Trout Point. Even though the tug
lies in 70 ft. of water, the pilot house
starts in 40 ft. of water, making a great
dive for beginners to experts.
The
SMITH MOORE , a 260-foot
three masted steamer which sank July 13,
1889. Bound from Marquette with her holds
filled with iron ore, the freighter was running
in a dense fog when she was rammed by the
similarly sized steamer JAMES PICKANDS. The
PICKANDS never stopped and, though she remained
afloat for some time, the MOORE was fatally
damaged. After the fog lifted, her distress
signals brought the freighter M M DRAKE to
her assistance. The MOORE's crew was taken
off and the steamer herself taken in tow,
but she sank on her approach to Munising.
The
WRECK MYSTERIES - WHERE ARE THEY NOW ?
Rumors, legends and stories of shipwrecks
abound in the Grand Island area. 30 ships are
known to have gone down in the area of the
Pictured Rocks. Of these, nearly half remain
undiscovered. 
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