Mount Martha, Ian Road
Shore Dive | Shore access
Depth: 3 m (9.84 ft) to 5 m (16 ft)
Ian Road is the most southerly of the five dive sites in Mount Martha out from the 8 kilometres of low cliff coastline between Balcombe Point to the north and Martha Point to the south. There are five creek gullies which give fairly easy track access to the different dive sites. The four other dive sites are: Deakin Drive, Hearn Road, Burdoo Way and Stanley Crescent.
See WillyWeather (Mount Martha) as a guide for the tide times and the height of the tide.
Traditional Owners — This dive site is in the traditional Country of the Boon Wurrung / Bunurong people of the Kulin Nation. This truly ancient Country includes parts of Port Phillip, from the Werribee River in the north-west, down to Wilson's Promontory in the south-east, including the Mornington Peninsula, French Island and Phillip Island, plus Western Port. We wish to acknowledge the Boon Wurrung as Traditional Owners. We pay respect to their Ancestors and their Elders, past, present and emerging. We acknowledge Bunjil the Creator Spirit of this beautiful land, who travels as an eagle, and Waarn, who protects the waterways and travels as a crow, and thank them for continuing to watch over this Country today and beyond.
Mount Martha, Ian Road Location Map
Latitude: 38° 17.690′ S (38.294837° S / 38° 17′ 41.41″ S)
Longitude: 144° 59.068′ E (144.984464° E / 144° 59′ 4.07″ E)
Datum: WGS84 |
Google Map
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Added: 2012-07-22 09:00:00 GMT, Last updated: 2022-03-22 15:42:23 GMT
Source: Google Earth
Nearest Neighbour: Mount Martha, Stanley Crescent, 318 m, bearing 31°, NNE
Mount Martha, Mornington Peninsula, Port Phillip.
Depth: 3 to 5 m.
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DISCLAIMER: No claim is made by The Scuba Doctor as to the accuracy of the dive site coordinates listed here. Should anyone decide to use these GPS marks to locate and dive on a site, they do so entirely at their own risk. Always verify against other sources.
The marks come from numerous sources including commercial operators, independent dive clubs, reference works, and active divers. Some are known to be accurate, while others may not be. Some GPS marks may even have come from maps using the AGD66 datum, and thus may need be converted to the WGS84 datum. To distinguish between the possible accuracy of the dive site marks, we've tried to give each mark a source of GPS, Google Earth, or unknown.