Posted on 03/05/2019 5:08:55 PM PST by robowombat
Anchor from 'most valuable shipwreck in history' found
Anchor found off of U.K. coast could be from one of Britains richest ship wrecks An anchor brought up in a trawler's fishing nets off the coast of the U.K. is reportedly from a 17th-century shipwreck. The anchor is believed to be from the Merchant Royal, which has been described as one of Britains richest wrecks, carrying cargo worth around $10.5 million.
SWNS reports that the anchor, believed to be from the Merchant Royal, was brought up in a fishing vessels net 20 miles off Land's End, Cornwall. The merchant ship sank in 1641 carrying an estimated $1.5 billion of treasure.
Dubbed the El Dorado of the seas, the Merchant Royal was carrying 100,000 pounds of gold and 400 bars of Mexican silver, as well as almost 500,000 pieces of eight (Spanish dollars) and other coins when she sank.
However, a local wreck expert warns that the ship went down in a treacherous location and amateur divers could be placing themselves in danger if they attempt to retrieve any of it.
(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
PING
I love this stuff!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fo7XPvwRgG8
Interesting
Material for a new Clive Cussler book !!!
Material for a new Clive Cussler book !!!
I took it to mean the cargo (at the time) was worth $10MM. And the treasure today would be $1.5B. But I would think it would be worth even more now that I think about it.
Price of gold in the late 1700’s was about $20, now it is about $1,200 per ounce. So 60x more. That gets you to $600MM if it was all gold. The coins are probably worth more than 200x, silver???, etc.
It’s a garbled post. The source says the $10.5 million cargo is from the ship ‘President’.
The $1.5 billion cargo is from the ship ‘Merchant Royal’.
BTW, after reading the article, it sounds like these guys might just try to be hustling for investors to go after the lost treasure. In the article it talks about how this is the type of anchor that would have been used on that type of ship.
I suppose more research into the anchor might reveal some clues, but I’m guessing they didn’t number them or put the ship’s name on them. (Unlike the ship’s bell in more recent times.)
Would a ship have tried to set anchor in 300 feet of water? I would doubt it - but perhaps use it as a sea anchor?
Maybe Paul Allen’s research company can do a search for it? It would help fund further searches that they do. (Although I’m guessing they aren’t hurting for funds.)
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