The bioluminescent waves – caused by a dinoflagellate algae that turns the ocean red during the day but glows when agitated at night – have been documented in Oxnard and Malibu, in Newport Beach and Laguna Beach, and off San Diego's coastline in recent days.
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The sand on this beach glows in the dark because of ostracod crustaceans, or sea shrimp. These tiny organisms, only one millimeter in length, emit the blue light for up to a minute, lighting up your path as you walk across the beach.
Bioluminescence is evident in the waters around Cocoa Beach throughout the year. However, visitors will likely see it at its most intense in glowing algae between July and October. November tends to be a busy month for glowing comb jellies which creates quite a show under the waves once the sun goes down.
Summers on the Space Coast are truly out-of-this-world. From June to October, the waters of the Mosquito Lagoon, Banana River, and Indian River Lagoon come alive with bioluminescence.
The MaldivesThese tiny organisms, only one millimeter in length, emit the blue light for up to a minute, lighting up your path as you walk across the beach. These glowing sand beaches don't just occur in the Maldives; you can find them in Jamaica, Puerto Rico, Belgium, and San Diego, too.
An incredible discovery on the beach in Daytona Beach Shores — an old shipwreck, likely dating back centuries, exposed by severe erosion after Tropical Storm Nicole.An archaeological team brought in by the state was on-site on Tuesday. “It's a wooden-hulled shipwreck.
The Forgotten Coast (Franklin County, FL) is a large rural county, sparsely populated and tucked behind the pines of the Apalachicola National Forest along the Gulf of Mexico in the panhandle of Florida. It is about 75 miles southwest of Tallahassee and 65 miles east of Panama City.
Notable spots to see bioluminescence in popular bodies of water in the U.S. include Tomales Bay State Park in northern California, Vieques National Wildlife Refuge in Puerto Rico, Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary in Washington and bays near Acadia National Park in Maine.
People in Namibia have a much higher chance of finding it.Iceland's black sand beaches are a tourist highlight, Alaska's jewel sand is stuffed full of aesthetically pleasing minerals, but in Namibia, you can stumble across bright blue sand.