How to Find Sunken Treasure

(Image credit: Flickr user César Rincón)

Modern treasure hunting isn’t all maps and shovels—it takes science, too.

STEP 1: PICK A SHIPWRECK

There are plenty of ships in the sea. According to UNESCO, roughly three million shipwrecks across the globe are just waiting to be found, and at least 100 of them boast potential values that top $50 million. So what’s the best-case scenario? Finding the Flor de la Mar, a Portuguese ship that sank north of Sumatra. The storied treasure includes 60 tons of gold and 200 chests of diamonds, emeralds, rubies, and sapphires worth up to $3 billion.

STEP 2: IMAGINE THE RICHES THAT COULD BE YOURS

Shiny!

STEP 3: HIRE PROFESSIONALS

It may seem like cheating, but most unclaimed treasures are too deep for scuba gear.

In fact, salvage companies invest big bucks in equipment to travel miles below the surface. Odyssey Marine Exploration, one of the world’s premier firms, has spent at least $100 million on the essentials, including its 251-foot flagship, the Odyssey Explorer. The ship’s capable of carrying 60 days’ worth of provisions for its 42 crew members; three tow fish for seabed surveys; and two remotely operated vehicles (ROVs) that can dive to 4,000 meters and beyond.

All that equipment pays off in sweet government contracts. In 2010, the Brits gave Odyssey salvage work, paired with archaeological responsibilities, for the SS Gairsoppa—a WWII merchant ship torpedoed about 300 miles southwest of Galway, Ireland, while carrying at least 219 tons of silver. The water’s extreme depth has protected the sunken treasure for decades (it’s 2.9 miles down, nearly half a mile deeper than the Titanic). But the rising price of precious metals has made salvaging the loot an attractive proposition. Today, the Gairsoppa’s cargo of bullion, ingots, and coins is worth around $270 million.

STEP 4: BE PATIENT

Unfortunately, you can’t just take the barnacle-crusted money and run. As the folks at Odyssey know, recovery is a lengthy process, made even longer by archaeological requirements. Here’s how a typical salvage works: First, the team dispatches a remote-controlled submersible to survey the wreck and take photos to create a detailed mosaic of the scene. Marine archaeologists then direct a fleet of ROVs to search the ship, recording the distribution of artifacts and cataloging any organisms that now call the ship home. When they begin recovering objects, a computer program maps and determines the precise location of each artifact, using a network of acoustic transponders placed on the ocean floor to triangulate locations. Then comes the fun part.

Like a high-stakes arcade crane, scientists use ROVs to spray away the sediment with gentle water pressure, then suck up the tiny, fragile objects with a low-power vacuum. But that’s just the artifacts. Recovering all that precious bullion poses even more technical challenges. Technicians must pluck individual coins and ingots from rotten wooden storage structures and navigate the remote vehicles past rusted metal containers. Odyssey began work on the Gairsoppa in September 2011, and it’s still picking the ship clean. Once it’s done the Gairsoppa will hold the title of largest marine salvage of precious metals in history.

STEP 5: FIGHT FOR YOUR RIGHT TO BOOTY

(Image credit: Almokla)

There’s just one hitch in the plunder recovery biz—sometimes the original owners want their loot back. Odyssey recently had to hand over several hundred million dollars’ worth of gold and silver it had salvaged in 2007 from the Spanish galleon Nuestra Señora de las Mercedes. The Spanish government successfully argued in a U.S. federal court that the treasure still belonged to Spain—although the Spaniards also had to fend off a surprise last-minute claim from Peru, where the metal was mined, refined, and coined. Funny how everyone becomes interested in history when there’s a small mountain of gold coins at stake!

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The article above, written by Erik Sass, is reprinted with permission from the Septembr 2012 issue of mental_floss magazine. Get a subscription to mental_floss and never miss an issue!

Be sure to visit mental_floss' website and blog for more fun stuff!


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"...sometimes the original owners want their loot back." Typical government response - you do all the work, we take as much of the profit as we can. There should be an international statute of limitations on lost stuff. I figure 100 years would be a good time. After that, any "treasure" is fair game to whomever wants to put forth the effort of finding it.

Also, if insurance has compensated for the loss then the insured no longer has a right to the lost property. And, one more thing that should be but isn't, if the insurance company accepted the risk and was paid for the coverage then they should accept the loss and not pursue reimbursement for the property value once the claim is paid. That's how I see it anyway.
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