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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Geography and climate  



1.1  Climate  







2 History and development  



2.1  Bavaro area  







3 Population  





4 Tourism  





5 Infrastructure  



5.1  Transportation  





5.2  Electricity  





5.3  Activities and landmarks  





5.4  Diving  





5.5  Safety  







6 Marine biodiversity  





7 List of authorities  





8 See also  





9 References  



9.1  Bibliography  







10 External links  














Punta Cana






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Coordinates: 18°32N 68°22W / 18.533°N 68.367°W / 18.533; -68.367
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (August 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Punta Cana
Cap Cana Marina area in Punta Cana, Dominican Republic
Cap Cana Marina area in Punta Cana, Dominican Republic
Official seal of Punta Cana
Punta Cana is located in the Dominican Republic
Punta Cana

Punta Cana

Punta Cana in the Dominican Republic

Coordinates: 18°32′N 68°22′W / 18.533°N 68.367°W / 18.533; -68.367

Country

Dominican Republic

Province

La Altagracia Province

Municipality

Higüey

Incorporated (town)

27 June 2006[1]

Government

 • Director of Verón–Punta Cana

Ramón Antonio Ramírez (Dominican Liberation Party, 2016–2028)

Area

 • Total

475.3 km2 (183.5 sq mi)

Population
 (2022)[4]

 • Total

138,919

 • Density

290/km2 (760/sq mi)

Time zone

UTC−4 (Atlantic)

Area code(s)

809, 829, and 849

Punta Cana is a resort town in the easternmost region of the Dominican Republic. It was politically incorporated as the『Verón–Punta Cana township』in 2006, and it is subject to the municipality of Higüey (La Altagracia Province). According to the 2022 census, this township or district had a population of 138,919 inhabitants.[5]

Punta Cana is the second-most popular tourist destination in Latin America, with more visitors than any other city in the Caribbean region.[citation needed] The Punta Cana International Airport (PUJ) is located about 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) inland, on the highway that leads from Higüey to La Romana. This airport receives 64% of all flights that arrive in the Dominican Republic, receiving more passengers than the Las Américas International Airport, located in Santo Domingo, the country's capital.

The area is known for its white sand beaches, blue turquoise waters, and balnearios which face both the Caribbean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean. The weather is hot for most of the year, especially in late summer and autumn when the Northern Tropics receive their most direct sunlight.

Geography and climate[edit]

Beach in Punta Cana

The Punta Cana area has an estimated population of 100,000, with an annual growth rate of 11% as of 2011.[6] To the north, it borders the village and beach of Cabeza de Toro, and the Bávaro and El Cortecito beaches. The nearest city, the 500-year-old Higüey, is 45 kilometres (28 mi) away, which takes about an hour to reach by car. European entrepreneurs, particularly Spanish hotel chains, own all but two of the over 50 megaresorts at the Punta Cana tourism destination.

The province's 100-kilometre (62 mi) coastline tends to be mildly windy. The ocean waters are mainly shallows, with several natural marine pools in which visitors can bathe without danger. From north to south, the main beaches are Uvero Alto, Macao, Arena Gorda, Bávaro, El Cortecito, Las Corales, and Cabeza de Toro, all north of the cape; and Cabo Engaño, Punta Cana, and Juanillo south of the cape.

Beach in Punta Cana
Sunrise over Punta Cana

Bávaro is the area starting from Cabeza de Toro until Macao Beach. As the hotels started to rise along the east coast, Bavaro itself became a center of services with shopping malls, fast-food stores, drug stores, fine restaurants, banks, clinics, workshops, supermarkets, and schools. The major town in the district is Veron, now bigger than Higüey in territory, a spontaneous – and poor – urban development running along the original road from the west. Verón, last name of the French proprietor of a timberline business in the early 1930s, is now the base-city for hotel workers and related. It has, besides Bávaro, one of only four gas stations in Punta Cana: the next one is located 48 kilometres (30 mi) west in Higüey, at the Fruisa crossroads; a new Texaco gas station opened in April 2010, 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) south of Macao beach; and the new Shell gas station close to the airport (on the highway Coral) opened at the end of 2010.

Punta Cana Village, with a population of about 3,000, is being developed by a master plan of the Punta Cana Group. In 1969 the area was purchased by this organization and development began in the following decades.[7] The main avenue, Boulevard Primero de Noviembre, is lined with low office buildings. Branching off are streets with gated communities on both sides. To the east are single family residences. Small apartment buildings are to the west. A shopping area is near the airport and beyond the apartment houses is a mall and several stores.[8] East of the village is the Westin Resort and golf course by the ocean. There is a public beach, Playa Blanca, with a shuttle bus from the Village's sole hotel. An upscale planned community, Cap Cana, is south of Punta Cana Village.[9]

Climate[edit]

Punta Cana features a tropical wet and dry climate under the Köppen climate classification. The weather is fairly consistent all year, with an average temperature of 26 °C (79 °F). The hot and humid season lasts from May to October, and during the day temperatures might reach 35 °C (95 °F). From November to March, temperatures during the evening are around 20 °C (68 °F).

Climate data for Punta Cana

Month

Jan

Feb

Mar

Apr

May

Jun

Jul

Aug

Sep

Oct

Nov

Dec

Year

Record high °C (°F)

31.0
(87.8)

30.7
(87.3)

31.2
(88.2)

32.0
(89.6)

33.9
(93.0)

34.4
(93.9)

34.7
(94.5)

34.5
(94.1)

34.6
(94.3)

33.7
(92.7)

32.7
(90.9)

32.5
(90.5)

34.7
(94.5)

Mean daily maximum °C (°F)

27.7
(81.9)

27.6
(81.7)

28.1
(82.6)

28.7
(83.7)

29.6
(85.3)

30.3
(86.5)

30.5
(86.9)

30.7
(87.3)

30.9
(87.6)

30.5
(86.9)

29.4
(84.9)

28.1
(82.6)

29.3
(84.7)

Daily mean °C (°F)

24.8
(76.6)

24.7
(76.5)

25.0
(77.0)

25.5
(77.9)

26.4
(79.5)

27.2
(81.0)

27.5
(81.5)

27.7
(81.9)

27.6
(81.7)

27.0
(80.6)

26.3
(79.3)

25.2
(77.4)

26.2
(79.2)

Mean daily minimum °C (°F)

21.9
(71.4)

21.8
(71.2)

22.0
(71.6)

22.5
(72.5)

23.2
(73.8)

24.1
(75.4)

24.6
(76.3)

24.8
(76.6)

24.4
(75.9)

23.6
(74.5)

23.2
(73.8)

22.3
(72.1)

23.2
(73.8)

Record low °C (°F)

16.0
(60.8)

14.0
(57.2)

14.8
(58.6)

15.2
(59.4)

16.0
(60.8)

14.9
(58.8)

19.0
(66.2)

17.9
(64.2)

15.0
(59.0)

15.0
(59.0)

15.9
(60.6)

14.0
(57.2)

14.0
(57.2)

Average rainfall mm (inches)

66.4
(2.61)

54.2
(2.13)

54.2
(2.13)

69.2
(2.72)

124.4
(4.90)

103.9
(4.09)

78.3
(3.08)

103.1
(4.06)

101.7
(4.00)

152.1
(5.99)

116.6
(4.59)

78.5
(3.09)

1,102.6
(43.41)

Average rainy days (≥ 0.1 mm)

10.0

6.8

6.7

6.6

10.1

9.2

9.1

10.0

10.4

11.4

11.5

11.0

112.8

Average relative humidity (%)

82.8

81.4

81.2

82.1

83.0

82.2

82.3

82.6

82.5

83.0

82.2

83.2

82.4

Mean monthly sunshine hours

256.9

241.9

278.8

265.0

249.7

255.1

268.3

271.2

245.2

242.7

238.3

233.2

3,046.3

Source 1: World Meteorological Organization[10]

Source 2: NOAA[11]

History and development[edit]

In the late 1960s, Frank Rainieri, a Dominican entrepreneur in his 20s and Theodore Kheel,[12] a high-powered New York attorney and labor mediator teamed up with other investors, to acquire a 58-million square meter lot on the eastern end of the Dominican Republic.[13] The area that is known today as Punta Cana was mostly an undeveloped coastal area of La Altagracia province. At the time the closest major city, Higüey, was a 5-hour drive. Their first project was a 40 guest hotel called the Punta Cana Club. In 1970, Rainieri changed the original name of the place, Yauya or Punta Borrachos, for Punta Cana. In 1978, the Paris Mediterranean Club joined the Grupo Punta Cana SA project, building a 350-room hotel within the project. Later, the Barceló and Newco Group settled in the Bavaro area.

Frank Rainieri with his family.

In 1979, the Hotel Puntacana was built and then in 1984, the Punta Cana International Airport was inaugurated, while more infrastructures such as highways were developed. In 1993, construction began on the Marina de Punta Cana Resort & Club marina. In 1996, the Dominican designer Óscar de la Renta and the Spanish singer Julio Iglesias joined the project. In 2000, the first of the residential community developments began and six years later Tortuga Bay opened.

Corporate environmental and social responsibilities and policies have been pursued since the resort was built. The Puntacana Foundation- made of the Ecological Foundation and Community Services- has a 1,500-acre reserve that now serves as a research base for universities and a sanctuary for endangered species and has opened two schools- the Ann & Ted Kheel Polytechnic and the Puntacana International School- and a free health clinic in the local community of Véron.[14][15]

Bavaro area[edit]

Bávaro was conceived as a town for the workers of the Punta Cana tourist complex, but it has been transformed into an important center for tourist services after the hotel expansion to the north of Punta Cana around Bávaro beach.[16]

Resort entrance in Bavaro area

Numerous tourist attractions have been installed, some of a certain size such as the Manatí Park in Bávaro, a water park with manatees, dolphins and other kinds of animals. For tourists, the Punta Cana beach area is more popular because it is more affordable at international prices. Among the best-known digital magazines and newspapers in the entire eastern area are: BavaroDigital and BavaroMagazine.

Bavaro is connected by road with Higüey and La Otra Banda. It extends about 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) north to Playa Macao. Other nearby beaches are: Uvero Alto, Roco Ki and La Vacama. Bavaro has 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) of beaches. The XII Ibero-American Summit was held on this site on November 15 and 16, 2002, where the heads of state and government of 21 Spanish and Portuguese-speaking nations met.

Population[edit]

The area has a low population density with the majority of the inhabitants being Haitian migrant workers. In 2010, Haitians represented 81.1 percent of the total population.[17]

Tourism[edit]

Punta Cana is a tourist destination,[18] and the area is a key contributor to tourism in the Dominican Republic.

Infrastructure[edit]

Transportation[edit]

The Punta Cana International Airport is the primary airport. In 2014, Punta Cana received over 2.4 million passengers, making it the second-busiest airport in the Caribbean.[19] Grupo Puntacana built the Punta Cana International Airport in 1984 to facilitate tourism in the area. It was the western hemisphere's first privately owned international airport.[20]

Electricity[edit]

The electricity is powered by Consorcio Energetico Punta Cana Macao (CEPM), a fossil fuel, renewable, and biomass energy producer led by US-based Argentine businessman Rolando Gonzalez-Bunster.[21][22]

Activities and landmarks[edit]

Many of the excursions in Punta Cana are near the water, it being a beach destination. These activities include snorkeling, windsurfing, banana boat rides, speedboats, scuba diving, catamaran cruises, party boats, deep sea fishing, as well as swimming with dolphins and sharks and snorkeling with stingrays. For visitors who prefer to see more of the Dominican countryside, there are land-based excursions such as safari tours, horseback riding and dune buggies.

Visiting the Dominican Republic's smaller Caribbean islands of Saona and Catalina is a day trip from Punta Cana. The capital city Santo Domingo, and Los Haitises National Park, Samaná, are within a couple of hours. The Basilica Catholic Monument, built in 1962 and designed by two French architects, is in nearby Higüey, the 500-year-old capital of the province.

Diving[edit]

Because of its location at the Caribbean Sea, diving is one of the tourist activities. The marine area surrounding Punta Cana was declared a marine reserve in 2012.

Safety[edit]

Punta Cana received negative publicity in the summer of 2019 for a series of American tourist deaths.[23] Initially these deaths were reported as “mysterious,” with tainted alcohol and pesticides being rumored as possible reasons. However, with the help of the FBI and United States Department of State, it was found via toxicology reports that the deaths were from natural causes.

Punta Cana is generally a very safe travel destination.[24]

Marine biodiversity[edit]

The following species have been registered in the waters around Punta Cana:

Group

Common name

Scientific name

Image

Notes

Fish

yellowtail snapper

Ocyurus chrysurus

queen triggerfish

Balistes vetula

glasseye

Heteropriacanthus cruentatis

whitespotted filefish

Cantherhines macrocerus

spotted goatfish

Pseudupeneus maculatus

yellow goatfish

Mulloidichthys martinicus

Bermuda chub

Kyphosus sectatrix

great barracuda

Sphyraena barracuda

bar jack

Caranx ruber

saucereye porgy

Calamus calamus

French angelfish

Pomacanthus paru

southern stingray

Dasyatis americana

yellow stingray

Urolobatis jamaicensis

spotted eagle ray

Aetobatus narinari

Caribbean reef shark

Carcharhinus perezi

goldentail moray

Gymnothorax miliaris

spotted moray

Gymnothorax moringa

mangrove snapper

Lutjanus griseus

mutton snapper

Lutjanus analis

porkfish

Anisotremus virginicus

black margate

Anisotremus surinamensis

blue striped grunt

Haemulon sciurus

Caesar grunt

Haemulon carbonarium

French grunt

Haemulon flavolineatum

Spanish grunt

Haemulon macrostomum

tomtate grunt

Haemulon aurolineatum

white grunt

Haemulon plumierii

black grouper

Mycteroperca bonaci

coney

Cephalopholis fulva

Nassau grouper

Epinephelus striatus

sergeant major

Abudefduf saxatilis

lucky grouper

Epinephelus guttatus

yellowfin grouper

Mycteroperca venenosa

graysby

Cephalopholis cruentata

harlequin bass

Serranus tigrinus

princess parrotfish

Scarus taeniopterus

queen parrotfish

Scarus vetula

rainbow parrotfish

Scarus guacamaia

redband parrotfish

Sparisoma aurofrenatum

redfin parrotfish

Sparisoma rubripinne

redtail parrotfish

Sparisoma chrysopterum

stoplight parrotfish

Sparisoma viride

Spanish hogfish

Bodianus rufus

hogfish

Lachnolaimus maximus

bonefish

Albula vulpes

long-spine porcupinefish

Diodon holocanthus

red lionfish (invasive)

Pterois volitans

yellowtail damselfish

Microspathodon chrysurus

yellowhead wrasse

Halichoeres garnoti

Reptiles

green sea turtle

Chelonia mydas

hawksbill sea turtle

Eretmochelys imbricata

Mollusks

Caribbean reef squid

Sepioteuthis sepiodea

common octopus

Octopus vulgaris

queen conch

Lobatus gigas

Crustaceans

banded coral shrimp

Stenopus hispidus

Caribbean spiny lobster

Panulirus argus

spotted spiny lobster

Panulirus guttatus

Scyllarides aequinoctialis

Corals

purple sea fan

Gorgonia ventalina

sea ginger

Millepora alcicornis

blade fire coral

Millepora complanata

Millepora squarrosa

Stephanoccenia intercepta

elkhorn coral

Acropora palmata

staghorn coral

Acropora cervicornis

fused staghorn coral

Acropora prolifera

Agaricia agarities

finger coral

Porites porites

Montastrea annuligera

Montastrea colemani

Montastrea curta

Montastrea magnistellata

Montastrea multipunctata

Montastrea salebrosa

Montastrea serageldini

pillar coral

Dendrogyra cylindrus

Algae

Halimeda opuntia

cactus tree alga

Caulerpa cupressoides

Coelothrix irregularis

Haploplegma duperryi

Rhodophyta orden

Dictyota cervicornis

Stypopodium zonale

Sea grasses

turtlegrass

Thalassia testudinum

manatee grass

Syringodium filiforme

Echinoderms

donkey dung sea cucumber

Holothuria mexicana

black sea urchin

Diadema antillarum

Mammals

West Indian manatee

Trichechus manatus

Birds

brown pelican

Pelecanus occidentalis

common tern

Sterna hirundo

great egret

Ardea alba

green heron

Butorides virescens

yellow-crowned night heron

Nyctanassa violacea

killdeer

Charadrius vociferus

western osprey

Pandion haliaetus

magnificent frigatebird

Fregata magnificens

List of authorities[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  • ^ Rodríguez, Ramón. "Cholitín celebra victoria electoral como nuevo alcalde de Higüey". Diario Libre.
  • ^ González, Julio (March 16, 2020). "¿Quién es Ramón Ramírez, el virtual ganador de la Dirección Distrital de Verón-Punta Cana?".
  • ^ a b (in Spanish) 9th Census of Population and Housing (2010), General Report Archived 2012-12-02 at the Wayback Machine. National Bureau of Statistics.
  • ^ X Censo de Población y Vivienda, 2022 Oficina Nacional de Estadistica
  • ^ Valdez Architects & Associates. 2008–2009 Zoning Plan assigned by the Hotel Association.
  • ^ Our History and the Puntacana Brand
  • ^ Punta Cana Village Master Plan
  • ^ Cap Cana
  • ^ "World Weather Information Service - Punta Cana". World Meteorological Organization. Retrieved February 23, 2013.
  • ^ "Climate Normals for Cabo Engaño (Punta Cana) 1961-1990". National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Retrieved February 23, 2013.
  • ^ Entrée Magazine. "Tortuga Bay", Holiday, 2009. "The resort was the vision of American labor lawyer Ted Kheel and a spirited, young Dominican named Frank Rainieri."
  • ^ Airways Magazine. "Punta Cana Airport: From Jungle to Caribbean Showpiece", May 2009. "Late in the Sixties, Frank Rainieri and Ted Kheel, along with other investors, bought a large parcel of land, for what was then the bargain price of $200,000 at the eastern end of the Dominican Republic, which occupies the eastern part of the Caribbean Island of Hispaniola, itself part of the Greater Antilles archipelago."
  • ^ Condé Nast Traveler. "World Savers Awards: Education", September 2009. "To keep up with the growth, it built a well-equipped high school, where the staff's offspring study alongside the CEO's grandchildren."
  • ^ Austin Monthly. "Mother Nature's Getaway", April 2009. "They invested in the local economy: building schools, a hospital and a police station and establishing the now world-renowned ecological foundation, which proved their commitment to protect the environment."
  • ^ Ministry of Tourism. "Dominican Republic East coast - Punta Cana Bávaro".
  • ^ "Peligrosos enclaves haitianos en el Este". Listín Diario (in Spanish). 30 November 2013. Retrieved 30 November 2013.
  • ^ Robinson, William I. (2013). "L'Amérique latine face au nouveau capitalisme mondialisé" [Latin America Facing the New Globalized Capitalism]. Mouvements (in French). 4 (76): 14–24. doi:10.3917/mouv.076.0013 – via Cairn.info.
  • ^ "Punta Cana Facts Sheet" (PDF). Punta Cana International Airport.
  • ^ "Dominican Republic flights to Punta Cana International Airport". Punta Cana International Airport. Retrieved 30 June 2019.
  • ^ "Our Company - About Consorcio Energético Punta Cana-Macao S.A." CEPM. Retrieved 2021-12-15.
  • ^ "Thermal Energy". CEPM. Retrieved 2021-12-15.
  • ^ "8 questions about the unexplained tourist deaths in the Dominican Republic, answered". The Washington Post.
  • ^ "Americans are far more likely to be killed in the US than in the Dominican Republic". CNN. 25 June 2019.
  • ^ "Yellowtail Snapper - Ocyurus chrysurus - Snappers - - Tropical Reefs". reefguide.org. Retrieved 30 June 2019.
  • ^ https://acento.com.do/politica/maria-veron-aspira-ser-diputada-por-la-altagracia-y-quiere-justa-distribucion-del-presupuesto-para-su-provincia-9250047.html
  • ^ https://www.diariolibre.com/actualidad/alcaldes-de-higuey-y-vern-suscriben-acuerdo-HNDL637101
  • ^ https://bavarodigital.net/manolito-ramirez-toma-juramento-para-su-tercer-periodo-consecutivo-como-director-distrital-de-veron-punta-cana/
  • Bibliography[edit]

    External links[edit]

    Reef diving regions

  • Aliwal Shoal Marine Protected Area
  • Amed (Bali)
  • Anilao
  • Apo Island
  • Apo Reef
  • Arrecifes de Cozumel National Park
  • Bay of Pigs
  • Belize Barrier Reef
  • Biscayne National Park
  • Bohol Sea
  • Bowie Seamount
  • Bunaken
  • Cahuita National Park
  • Calve Island
  • Capurganá
  • Ċirkewwa
  • Cliff Villa Peninsula
  • Cozumel
  • Dhilba Guuranda-Innes National Park
  • Edmonds Underwater Park
  • El Ikhwa Islands
  • False Bay
  • Għar Qawqla
  • Gili Islands
  • Great Barrier Reef
  • Great Southern Reef
  • Guadalupe Island Biosphere Reserve
  • Haql
  • Hol Chan Marine Reserve
  • iSimangaliso Marine Protected Area
  • John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park
  • Kadmat Island
  • Ko Tao
  • Lighthouse Reef
  • Mantanani Islands
  • Malapascua
  • Martin's Haven
  • Marsa Alam
  • Molasses Reef
  • Molokini
  • Neptune Islands
  • Osprey Reef
  • Palancar Reef
  • Panglao, Bohol
  • Pescador Island
  • Petit Saint Vincent
  • Poor Knights Islands
  • Porteau Cove Provincial Park
  • Puerto Galera
  • Punta Cana
  • Ras Muhammad National Park
  • Rondo Island
  • Rottnest Island
  • San Andrés (island)
  • San Pedro Nolasco Island
  • Shaʽb Abu Nuħas
  • Shadwan Island
  • Similan Islands
  • Sipadan
  • Socorro Island
  • Sound of Mull
  • St. Crispin's Reef
  • Table Mountain National Park Marine Protected Area
  • Taganga
  • Tsitsikamma Marine Protected Area
  • Tubbataha Reef
  • Utila
  • Wakatobi Regency
  • Weh Island
  • Reef dive sites

  • Cod Hole
  • Daedalus Reef
  • Darwin's Arch
  • Devil's Throat at Punta Sur
  • Elphinstone Reef
  • Eyemouth
  • Fanadir
  • Frederiksted Pier
  • French Reef
  • Fowey Rocks Light
  • Gamul Kebir
  • Hillsea Point Rock
  • Inland Sea, Gozo
  • Kennack Sands
  • The Manacles
  • Magic Point
  • Octopus Hole
  • Pope's Eye
  • Portsea Hole
  • Second Valley
  • Sund Rock
  • St Abbs
  • Stingray City, Grand Cayman
  • Wolf Rock
  • Artificial reefs

  • Gibraltar Artificial Reef
  • Merkanti Reef
  • Port Hughes jetty
  • Port Noarlunga jetty
  • Rapid Bay jetty
  • Shark River Reef
  • South Channel Fort
  • Osborne Reef
  • Underwater artworks

  • Christ of the Abyss
  • Circle of Heroes
  • Kristu tal-Baħħara
  • Molinere Underwater Sculpture Park
  • Snorkelling sites

    Wreck diving regions

  • Calve Island
  • Chuuk Lagoon
  • Coron Bay
  • Edmonds Underwater Park
  • Shipwrecks of Isle Royale
  • Loch Long
  • Maritime Heritage Trail – Battle of Saipan
  • Michigan Underwater Preserves
  • Pearl and Hermes Atoll
  • Porteau Cove Provincial Park
  • Robben Island Marine Protected Area
  • Scapa Flow
  • Table Mountain National Park Marine Protected Area
  • Tulagi
  • Tulamben
  • Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary
  • Ve Skerries
  • Wardang Island
  • Western Rocks, Isles of Scilly
  • Whitefish Point Underwater Preserve
  • Wreck Alley, San Diego
  • Wreck dive sites

    A

  • HMS A3
  • USS Aaron Ward
  • Abessinia
  • USS Accokeek
  • HMAS Adelaide
  • SS Admiral Sampson
  • MVAdolphus Busch
  • Aeolian Sky
  • USS Aeolus
  • Agat World War II Amtrac
  • SSAjax
  • Albert C. Field
  • USS Algol
  • SSAlgoma
  • Al Munassir
  • Amaryllis
  • SSAmerica
  • USS Anderson
  • Andrea Doria
  • Antilla
  • Antilles
  • USS Apogon
  • SSAppomattox
  • Aquila
  • Aratama Maru
  • Arctic
  • USS Arkansas
  • SS Arratoon Apcar
  • USS Arthur W. Radford
  • SSAtlanta
  • USS Atlanta (CL-51)
  • SSAustralasia
  • B

  • SSBen Doran
  • SSBenwood
  • Bianca C.
  • USCGC Bibb
  • SS Binnendijk
  • USS Blenny
  • HMS Boadicea
  • Booya
  • HMSAS Bloemfontein
  • Breda
  • Brian Davis
  • HMAS Brisbane
  • HMHS Britannic
  • Bud Bar
  • Bungsberg
  • Byron
  • C

  • HMCS Cape Breton
  • USCGC Cape Henlopen
  • Captain Keith Tibbetts
  • Carl D. Bradley
  • USS Carlisle
  • Carnatic
  • Carthaginian II
  • SSCayuga
  • SSCedarville
  • Christina Nilsson
  • City of Bangor
  • SSCity of Everett
  • SSCity of Launceston
  • HMCS Chaudière
  • ROCS Chen Hai
  • Chester A. Congdon
  • SSClan Ranald
  • SSClifton
  • USCGC Comanche
  • SSComet
  • Constandis
  • HMAS Coogee
  • Cormoran
  • Cornelia B. Windiate
  • HMS Coronation
  • Crusader
  • PSCumberland
  • USS Curb
  • USCGC Cuyahoga
  • D

  • Daniel Lyons
  • David Tucker
  • SMS Dresden
  • SSD.R. Hanna
  • USCGC Duane
  • Dunraven
  • SSDwight L. Moody
  • E

  • Eastfield
  • SSEber Ward
  • SSEdgar E. Clark
  • HMT Elk
  • Ellengowan
  • USS Emmons
  • SSEmperor
  • RMS Empress of Ireland
  • SSErie L. Hackley
  • SSEspagne
  • SSEtruria
  • F

  • Fifi
  • Fleetwing
  • SS Francisco Morazan
  • SSFrancis Hinton
  • SSFrank O'Connor
  • F.T. Barney
  • Fujikawa Maru
  • Fumizuki
  • G

  • SATS General Botha
  • USNS General Hoyt S. Vandenberg
  • George A. Marsh
  • SSGeorge Dewey
  • George M. Cox
  • Georg Thiele
  • HMS Ghurka
  • USS Gilliam
  • SSGlenlyon
  • Glen Strathallan
  • SAS Good Hope
  • HMAS Goorangai
  • Gothenburg
  • Grace A. Channon
  • SSGrecian
  • Green Bay
  • MVGregory Poole
  • Gunilda
  • H

  • SSHenry Chisholm
  • MTHephaestus
  • Hermann Künne
  • HMS Hermes
  • Herzogin Cecilie
  • SSHesper
  • Hilma Hooker
  • Hispania
  • Home
  • HMS Hood
  • HMAS Hobart
  • I

  • USS Indra
  • SSIronsides
  • SSIsaac M. Scott
  • Island City
  • J

  • HMAS J2
  • HMAS J4
  • HMAS J5
  • James Eagan Layne
  • J.S. Seaverns
  • SSJohn B. Cowle
  • John M. Osborn
  • SSJohn Mitchell
  • Jura
  • K

  • Kashi Maru
  • PSKeystone State
  • King Cruiser
  • USS Kittiwake
  • Kizugawa Maru
  • SMS Kronprinz
  • Kyarra
  • Kyle Spangler
  • L

  • Lady Thetis
  • HMS Laforey
  • SSLakeland
  • USS Lamson
  • USAT Liberty
  • SSLouisiana
  • Louis Sheid
  • SSL.R. Doty
  • USS LST-507
  • Lumberman
  • M

  • HMCS Mackenzie
  • Madeira
  • SMS Markgraf
  • SSMarquette
  • Mayflower (scow)
  • Mikhail Lermontov
  • Maine
  • Maloja
  • HMS Maori
  • SS Maori
  • SSMargaret Olwill
  • Marguerite
  • SS Mauna Loa
  • USAT Meigs
  • Mendi
  • MVMercedes I
  • USCGC Mesquite
  • Metamora
  • SSMidland City
  • USS Mindanao
  • Minnedosa
  • SSMiowera
  • SSMilwaukee
  • USS Mizpah
  • Miztec
  • USCGC Mohawk
  • Mohegan
  • RMS Moldavia
  • SSMonarch
  • SSMonrovia
  • HMS Montagu
  • SSM.M. Drake
  • MV RMS Mulheim
  • USS Muliphen
  • SS Myron
  • N

  • Niagara
  • Niagara (tug)
  • HMCS Nipigon
  • SSNorman
  • Northerner
  • O

  • SSOnoko
  • USS Oriskany
  • Oslofjord
  • Ozone
  • P

  • P31
  • SSPanay
  • SSPapoose
  • Pedernales
  • Persier
  • HMAS Perth
  • SSPewabic
  • SAS Pietermaritzburg
  • USS Pilotfish
  • Piłsudski
  • SSPioneer
  • USCGC Point Swift
  • Pool Fisher
  • SSPort Kembla
  • HMS Port Napier
  • Preußen
  • President Coolidge
  • HMS Prince of Wales
  • Q

    R

  • Radaas
  • USS Rankin
  • Rainbow Warrior
  • SSRegina
  • HMS Repulse
  • RMS Rhone
  • Riva Palacio
  • Robert C. Pringle
  • SSRobert Wallace
  • USS Rochester
  • Rondo
  • Rosehill
  • Rosinco
  • Rotorua
  • Rouse Simmons
  • Royal Adelaide
  • Royal Charter
  • Rozi
  • SSRussia
  • S

  • Sagamore
  • HMCS Saguenay
  • Sakawa
  • Salem Express
  • SSSamuel Mather
  • Samuel P. Ely
  • Sanko Harvest
  • USS Saratoga
  • HMCS Saskatchewan
  • SSS.C. Baldwin
  • USS Schurz
  • USS Scuffle
  • USS Scrimmage
  • HMS Scylla
  • SSSelah Chamberlain
  • HMS Sidon
  • USCGC Spar
  • South Australian
  • USS Spiegel Grove
  • Sport
  • Stanegarth
  • Stanwood
  • Stella
  • SSStepas Darius
  • HMS St Lawrence
  • SSSuperior City
  • HMAS Swan
  • Sweepstakes
  • T

  • USCGC Tamaroa
  • USS Tarpon
  • Thesis
  • Thistlegorm
  • Thomas Friant
  • Thomas Wilson
  • Thunderbolt Wreck
  • Toa Maru
  • HMAS Tobruk
  • Tokai Maru
  • Torrey Canyon
  • SAS Transvaal
  • MVTreasure
  • HMNZS Tui
  • U

  • U-352
  • U-1195
  • Um El Faroud
  • V

  • USS Vermilion
  • SSVernon
  • SSVienna
  • W

  • Walter L M Russ
  • Washingtonian (1913)
  • PSWaubuno
  • HMNZS Wellington
  • SSWexford
  • SSWilliam C. Moreland
  • SSWisconsin
  • USS Wilkes-Barre
  • Y

  • YO-257
  • Yongala
  • HMCS Yukon
  • Z

  • Zealandia
  • Zingara
  • Cave dive sites

    Cave diving regions of the world

    Cave dive sites:

  • Blue hole
  • Boesmansgat
  • Cenote
  • Chinhoyi Caves
  • Cocklebiddy, Western Australia
  • Devil's Throat at Punta Sur
  • Engelbrecht Cave
  • Fossil Cave
  • Hranice Abyss
  • Jordbrugrotta
  • Kilsby sinkhole
  • Molnár János Cave
  • Nereo Cave
  • Piccaninnie Ponds
  • Pluragrotta
  • Pollatoomary
  • Ricks Spring
  • The Shaft
  • Sistema Dos Ojos
  • Sistema Huautla
  • Sistema Nohoch Nah Chich
  • Sistema Ox Bel Ha
  • Sistema Sac Actun
  • Uamh an Claonaite
  • Vortex Spring
  • Wakulla Springs
  • Wondergat
  • Zacatón
  • Freshwater dive sites

  • Blue Hole (New Mexico)
  • Blue Lake (Utah)
  • Dinorwic quarry
  • Dorothea quarry
  • Dutch Springs
  • Ewens Ponds
  • Homestead caldera
  • Little Blue Lake
  • Logue Brook Dam
  • Ponce de Leon Spring
  • Rum Jungle
  • Silfra
  • Vortex Spring
  • Wast Water
  • Wazee Lake
  • Training sites

  • Capernwray Dive Centre
  • Deep Dive Dubai
  • Deepspot
  • Eccleston Quarry
  • Hotel Terme Millepini
  • National Diving and Activity Centre
  • Nemo 33
  • Seacrest Cove 2
  • Slickstones Quarry, Cromhall
  • Stoney Cove
  • Swanage Pier
  • Blue-water diving
  • Low impact diving
  • Recreational diving
  • Scuba diving
  • Scuba diving tourism
  • Underwater archaeology
  • Underwater diving
  • Wall diving
  • Category: Underwater diving sites
  • Commons: Category:Recreational dive sites
  • Index of recreational dive sites
  •  Portal:Underwater diving
  • International

    National

  • BnF data
  • Germany
  • Israel
  • United States
  • Geographic


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Punta_Cana&oldid=1233888324"

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    This page was last edited on 11 July 2024, at 12:37 (UTC).

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