Diving in cenotes in the Mexican Caribbean: a mind-blowing experience

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The cenotes in the Mexican Caribbean are an authentic paradise for divers, with different aquatic sceneries in their depths, they are an experience that allows you to get to know what the Mayas called the underworld, with stalagmites and stalactites that resemble magical castles.
Descending into these caverns, which are home to some of the most beautiful creations and species that have remained trapped in time without evolving, have a mystery that enchants the thousands of tourists that choose these places to dive.
In these ancient sinkholes of the underwater world, of fresh and crystalline water, an exciting experience is lived, the flora and fauna and the most imaginative divers get to think about how in ancient times the ancient Mayan civilization had this scenery for their rituals.
That feeling of going through underwater caves with a great biodiversity, full of stalactites and stalagmites is indescribable.
Mexico has a great number of caves, grottos and caverns, there is a record of more than 9 thousand entrances
to the subterranean world in the Aztec nation, whose origins are diverse as the volcanic, by the dissolution of the limestone rock and anthropogenic actions.
The Tajma Ha cenote with limestone rock formations are of great interest, and a labyrinth of limestone formations, and a maze of tunnels and enormous chambers in a series of connected caves that offer a marvelous view.
It is located on Highway 307 that leads from Tulum to Playa del Carmen. The exit leading to the cenote is located 5 km south of Puerto Aventuras.
Also very popular with divers is the Dos Ojos cenote, a flooded doline of karst origin integrated by a system of flooded caves located north of Tulum, on the Caribbean coast of the Yucatan Peninsula.
The name Dos Ojos refers to two neighboring cenotes connected in a very large cavern area that look like two large eyes on the earth. Exploration of the system began precisely through these two cenotes.

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Son dos los nativos de Santa Lucía que han ganado el Premio Nobel: el poeta y dramaturgo Derek Walcott y el economista Sir Arthur Lewis.