Basics of Undersea Magic
Undersea Magic, or 'sea sourcery' has 7 mains principals, due to the seven seas.
1. Pacific Water drawing
The Art of leading water, changing its flow and shapes as well as effecting currents and tides. Often linked to luna magic and the two share many rituals and common symbols and traditions. Practiced as basic for all magical arts around the world.
2. Baltic Bed enchanting
Baltic Bed enchanting is a primary opposite to water drawing, its focus is the seafloor and changing the nature of the seabed to effect the water. Not as common and water-drawing, this art is a popular skill to develop, especially to those with a taste for earth magics and sand shaping spells.
3. Red aquatic control
Red controll is perhaps, the hardest and most tempermental of all the principals. It deals with aquatic animals, and is unlike most other creature control due expance of water and how the water effects the animals. Similar arts involve the manipulation of air to effect land creatures, however water can be harder to control.

4. Black drying and movements
Black drying is a very energy intense principal, although extreemly common, on a larger scale it becomes very difficult. It involves evaporating water, removing it or transferring from one place to another (ie. From a towel to a bowl, or a lake to large storm cloud). This art is more common in the Asia-Pacific region although severa tribes of the amazon have similar practices.
5. Tasman temperature distiller
Tasman temperature distilling is a more rarer practice of sea magic. It is about drawing energy from the water, or heat in specific cases. This can be a survival method, or simply a way to better enjoy the extreems of climate. Temerature distilling is common in Australia, South America, Siberia, Greenland and north Canada, as a traditional method of enjoying the cold.
6. Arafura siren and drowning techniques
This is one of the more morbid aspects of undersea magic, and is not a heavily endorsed nor encouraged aspect of study. It involves filling the lungs of air-breathing creature to drown them without exposure to water. Used as a very traditional form of torture in some culture (such as New Zealand), by filling lungs quickly for several seconds then emptying, causing the victim to slowly drown. More commonly seen as a method of hunting, versions involve filling lungs of aquatic animals with air to drown them.
7. Caspian Sinking crystals and stones
This art is directly linked to crystals and physical manifistations of magic, using them to draw land out or to draw seafloor up. This is especially useful when crossing rivers, blocking tidal waves or flooding in some cases. Sometimes used to create islands, or to destroy them, most famously in case of Atlantis.