Posted on 05/12/2015 12:09:07 PM PDT by Red Badger
Divers in Madagascar have found a silver bar weighing about 50 kilograms (110 pounds) that they believe was part of the treasure of pirate Captain Kidd.
The bar was presented to Madagascar's president, Hery Rajaonarimampianina, in a ceremony Thursday on the island of Sainte Marie, near the country's northeast coast. The bar was found in a bay off the island, the diving team said.
The team was led by Barry Clifford, an American undersea explorer who has been searching for pirate treasure for many decades. Clifford believes there could be more treasure on the bay floor where he found the bar, among debris that he believes belongs to one of Kidd's boats
"There's more down there," Clifford said. "I know the whole bottom of the cavity where I found the silver bar is filled with metal. It's too murky down there to see what metal, but my metal detector tells me there is metal on all sides."
The bar is around 40 centimeters (16 inches) long and has two clearly visible markings engraved on one side. The team believes it was manufactured at the end of the 17th century in Bolivia.
John de Bry, an underwater archaeologist called in as a consultant by the diving team, said after seeing the silver bar that he, too, believed it was connected to Captain Kidd but more research was needed to prove it.
William Kidd, known as Captain Kidd, raided ships at the end of the 17th century before being captured and executed in London in 1701.
Sainte Marie island was a hideout for pirates when Captain Kidd was active. The island offered safe harbours and was close to maritime trading routes.
Madagascar's president said he hoped that the discovery of the silver will increase Madagascar's international profile and bring more tourists to the island.
At one point during Clifford's current exploration, the Madagascar authorities called a halt the work, worried the team was violating archaeological procedures. The culture ministry appealed to UNESCO, the United Nations cultural body, to help them investigate. The work continued after the president's office intervened.
In this photo taken Thursday, May, 7, 2015 underwater explorer Barry Clifford, right, presents a silver bar he believes is part of the treasure of the pirate Captain Kidd, to the president of Madagascar, Hery Rajaonarimampianina, left, on Sainte Marie Island, Madagascar. (AP Photo/Martin Vogl)
Silver?.....Arrrgh, mateys!.......................
PinGGG?.................
It is mine...
keep your scurvy hands off me tray-zure
Got a serial number???............
keep your scurvy hands off me tray-zure
Think again sea dog, it's got my initials on it right where I carved them.
I saw this on History Channel 2. Imagine my surprise when I recognize one of the divers, Jeff Speigel, a childhood friend whom I haven’t seen in years. Very cool.
Now there's a name that needs to be on the back of a jersey...
I feel sorry for all the Malagasian children who have to learn how to spell their President's name.
P.S. Back when our daughter was in third grade, Mrs. Chajin and her husband taught her to spell "sphygmomanometer" (i.e. blood pressure cuff), which made the daughter feel very intelligent. Epilogue: she is signing up today for her summer courses, which include prereqs to the nursing program she hopes to enter in a year.
When I was a kid, in the 60’s, ANTIDISESTABLISHMENTARIANISM was the big word to spell.
Then along came SUPERCALIFRAGILISTEXPIALIDOCIOUS...........
I quit at principle/principal.
Took up smoking in the bathroom. :)
Barry Clifford is the diver who discovered the pirate ship Wydah and its treasure in Cape Cod Bay 25 or so years ago.
A few years ago I was at a coin show where a silver bar the size of the one Clifford is holding was displayed. It was from a spanish wreck and had Peruvian mint marks on it.
The price was $85,000, a bit steep for my wallet.
Yeah, I saw that. Never mind the silver. I want the cannon they were bringing up.
I thought Captain Kidd’s treasure was stashed on Oak Island.
Lol. Yeah that was pretty cool.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.