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Site de plongée

Silfra Fissure

Þingvellir, Iceland

Profondeur typique
18 m
Type
Eau douce
Niveau
Beginner
OPEN WATERADVANCEDSURFACE1020PALIER · 3–6 mTYPIQUE18 m

Notes

Crack between the Eurasian and North American plates; glacial water, 100 m+ vis.

Faune marine

Other
virtually sterile water — almost no fauna
Invertebrates
freshwater algae ('troll hair' on rocks)

Caractéristiques du site

  • Tectonic Fissure
  • Glacial Meltwater
  • 100m+ Visibility
  • UNESCO World Heritage
  • Drysuit Required
  • Freshwater
  • Drinkable Water
  • National Park

Quand plonger

Idéal
year-round

Silfra is a fissure in the Mid-Atlantic Ridge inside Þingvellir National Park (UNESCO World Heritage), where the North American and Eurasian tectonic plates pull apart ~2 cm/year. The water is meltwater from the Langjökull glacier ~50 km north, filtered through porous lava aquifer for 30–100 years before emerging — yielding 2–4 °C, exceptionally clear, and potable. Visibility is among the highest of any natural body of water (commonly reported in the high tens to over 100 m horizontally). Year-round dive — the constant meltwater flow keeps the fissure from freezing — but Sep–Apr surface temperatures and ice make the parking-lot kit-up brutal. Drysuit certification (or 10+ logged drysuit dives) mandatory at all operators. The standard route — Silfra Hall → Cathedral → Lagoon — is a mild downstream drift with a final swim across a shallow lagoon to exit.

Conditions & accès

Visibilité
80–120 m
Température
2–4 °C
Courant
Mild
Accès
Permit required
Niveau requis
Open Water + drysuit certification (or 10+ logged drysuit dives) — non-negotiable at all operators

Emplacement

64.2558° N, 21.1217° W

Sources

Issu de 2 sources

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