The U.S. planes that sank at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean during World War II became a paradise for fish
Photographer Brandi Mueller photographed sunken U.S. military planes on the ocean floor near the Marshall Islands in the Pacific Ocean.
The Marshall Islands have a beautiful natural environment and are known as the black pearls of the South Pacific. In 1788, British captain John Marshall visited the archipelago to survey the island. In 1886, the Marshall Islands became a German protectorate. At the beginning of World War I, the Marshall Islands were occupied by Japan, and in World War II, they became an important base for Japan to fight in the Pacific.
Located southwest of the Hawaiian Islands and east of the Mariana and Caroline Islands, the Marshall Islands were the main islands in the Outer Defense Circle of the Central Pacific during World War II, and were also a necessary place for U.S. troops to attack the Caroline Islands and the Mariana Islands.
In February 1942, the U.S. army attacked the Marshall Islands, where a bloody battle broke out.
Decades later, the U.S. military planes that sank here became a paradise for fish.
It eventually became an underwater cemetery for airplanes. The U.S. military planes sunk at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean quietly tell the story of that period of history.
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