Divers head to crumbling ship wreckage in Malta to explore what lies beneath...
ADVENTUROUS divers swam more than 30 metres down to explore the 60-year old wrecks.
This scuba diving is not for the faint-hearted
Deep in the heart of the sea off the coast of Malta lie the remains of crumbling ships up to 60 years old.
The wrecks have long been alluring to tourists who are up for a next-level adventure.
Underwater photographer Wojciech Podhorski recently took on the challenge with a group of friends and captured these incredible pictures.
The scuba divers needed to descend a whopping 36 metres to explore the ruins of Rozi near Gozo Island.
A scuba diver swims in the shipwreck Rozi near Gozo, Malta
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Built in Bristol in the 1950s, this tug boat was scuttled in Malta in 1992.
Completely intact except for its engines and propeller, Rozi is a popular dive site for the impressive array of surrounding sea life.
Scorpion fish, sea breams, rainbow wrasses and cardinal fish can all be spotted from these ruins.
These divers swam through the spooky archway and caves to get an up-close view of the historic vessel.
The Rozi was a tug boat built in Bristol, UK and scuttled in Malta in 1992
Divers swim over the Um El Faroud shipwreck near Malta's Gozo Island
Next on the list was the nearby Um El Faroud.
Built in 1969 in Middlesbrough, the ship operated between Italy and Libya on refined fuel missions until 1995.
One night when it was docked in Malta, a deadly explosion took the lives of nine shipyard workers and damaged the vessel beyond repair.
Three years later, she was towed to sea and scuttled to an underwater home 25 metres deep.
A memorial plate for the workers who were killed can be spotted on the spooky shipwreck, which is only recommended for experienced divers.
Um El Faroud was scuttled in Malta after an explosion occurred
A scuba diver swims in wreck P29, a former Maltese patrol boat
Another one for experienced divers is the Maltese wreck of P29.
This thrill-seeking group captured eerie photos of the former patrol boat at a terrifying depth of 38 metres.
The former minesweeper was built in East Germany in the 1960s and scuttled in 2007.
Another underwater photographer who has captured haunting images of shipwrecks in Malta and around the world is Tobias Friedrich.
The 35-year-old from Wiesbaden, Germany, explained that the difficulty and danger is all part of the thrill.