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Egypt
General Stuff:
About Egypt
Camels
Egypts Coptic Christians
History:
St Katherines monastery
The Monks of Mount Sinai
Mohammed Ali
Napoleon Bonaparte
St Catherine
Nasser
The Harem
Ramses II
The Codex Sinaticus
Lawrence of Arabia
Moses and the crossing of the Red Sea
St Katherine's monastery and ideas of the universe
The first Crusade
The Red Sea
Egypt's Red Sea Bedouins
Jacques Cousteau: Red Sea Pioneer
History: the Red Sea
Djibouti: the least heard of state in the world?
The Red Sea and its Coral Reefs
Shark fishing banned in the Red Sea
Submarines and wrecks in the Red Sea
Shipwrecks as aritificial reefs
Red Sea Shipwrecks
Diving & Freediving:
Freediving
Yoga holidays & Scuba
Diving in Dahab
Dive Sites in Dahab
Dolphins in Egypt
Belly Dancing:
Belly dance in trouble
Interviews:
Dina, Egyp'ts top belly dancer
Hassan Khalil, belly dance choreographer
Keti Shariff, belly dancer and teacher
Liza Laziza, belly dancer in Cairo
Other Sections:
Yoga
Thailand
Morocco
Jaques CousteauJacques Cousteau arrived in the Red Sea on board his ship, the Calypso, in the 1960s. He documented shark activity in the Southern Egyptian Sea, but his lasting monument still survives off the coast of Sudan: the Conshelf two, an underwater capsule designed for five me to live in for a month – 35 feet below the surface. As well as being pioneer, journalist, writer and film-maker, Cousteau was also a prolific inventor. His most famous invention is probably the aqualung, but he invented many other gadgets, machines and constructions – including his series of underwater habitats.The Red Sea project was preceeded by the Conshelf 1, set up in
1962 on which two men had successfully lived for a week, diving underwater
for five hours each day, then returning to the undersea capsule to
eat and sleep. Cousteau began preparing a more ambitious project. |
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