Swimming through an area of extreme natural beauty, this diver  surveys the underwater canyons on his either side. But this British  scuba diver is actually between two tectonic plates.
Alex Mustard, 36, dived 80ft into the crevice between the North American and Eurasian plates near Iceland to capture these spectacular photos. The area is riddled with faults, valleys, volcanoes and hot springs, caused by the plates pulling apart at about one inch per year.
    
Alex Mustard, 36, dived 80ft into the crevice between the North American and Eurasian plates near Iceland to capture these spectacular photos. The area is riddled with faults, valleys, volcanoes and hot springs, caused by the plates pulling apart at about one inch per year.
The  area is riddled with faults,  valleys, volcanoes and hot springs,  caused by the plates pulling apart  at about one inch per year.
  Mr  Mustard snapped away as he and his dive partners swam through fresh   water canyons Silfra, Nes and Nikulasargja, which are up to 200ft deep.
  He  also took photos of the Arnarnes Strytur chimney, which forms a cloudy   plume as 80C water is ejected from Earth's crust and hits the cool 4C   seawater.
Ripe for exploration: The area is riddled with  faults, valleys,  volcanoes and hot springs, caused by the plates pulling  apart at about  one inch per year
 Mr Mustard swam through fresh  water canyons Silfra, Nes and Nikulasargja, which are up to 200ft deep






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