Current:Home > ScamsDivers map 2-mile trail of scattered relics and treasure from legendary shipwreck Maravillas -StockSource
Divers map 2-mile trail of scattered relics and treasure from legendary shipwreck Maravillas
View
Date:2025-04-12 13:10:11
After years of careful exploration, divers have helped map out a trail of scattered artifacts and treasure stretching for more than two miles through waters off the Bahamas, which for centuries have drawn archeologists and adventurers alike to search for remnants of a legendary shipwreck.
The Nuestra Señora de las Maravillas, a Spanish treasure ship, sank near the Bahamas in January 1656 after colliding with another ship. Treasure hunters have explored the area since then in search of the ship's lost cargo, and some historians estimate that around 5 million pesos' worth of silver bars, coins and worked silver was recovered from the site between 1656 and 1683. Major exploration and recovery projects continued over the ensuing centuries, with the wealth of relics found in 1972 by adventurer Robert Marx being particularly notable among the modern treasure-hunting expeditions in that area.
"Some people claim it's one of the richest Spanish galleons to go down in the New World," said Michael Pateman, curator of the Bahamas Maritime Museum in Freeport, while speaking about the Maravillas in an interview with "CBS Mornings" in April. Marine archeologist Jim Sinclair insisted in the same interview that the lost ship's main pile of treasure had not yet been found, saying, "We're probably looking at well over $100 million still sitting in the sand out here."
The Bahamian government in 1999 placed a moratorium on salvage expeditions after too many artifacts pulled from the wreck ended up in auctions and private collections across the world. But in 2019, the government lifted that moratorium to grant a license to AllenX — previously Allen Exploration — to explore whatever remained.
With the license, the company began to survey the waters west of the Little Bahama Bank for remains of the 891-ton, two-decked Spanish galleon. Their remote-sensing surveys and physical diving teams have so far identified a massive trove of relics that splay out from an original point near the spot where the Maravillas struck a reef on Jan. 4, 1656.
AllenX has pinpointed around 8,800 items "of potential cultural significance," the company said in a new report detailing the findings. It notes that the Maravillas treasure trail extends out almost 3 1/2 kilometers, or just over 2 miles, from a main ballast pile initially discovered in the 1970s, and says the area is also about a mile wide. A ballast pile is a mound of stones once stored in the hold of a vessel to stabilize it in the water, which can give clues as to the location of a shipwreck.
The complex trail of scattered artifacts "consists of a highly diverse array" of items that explorers and Bahamian officials deem culturally significant, ranging from "loose ballast stones, the occasional wooden plant, iron rigging, gun carriage concretions and two iron swivel guns to ceramics, silver pesos, silver bars, emeralds, amethysts and gold jewelry," the report says.
The majority of the Maravillas' remains, in the present day, are buried beneath layers of sand, some as deep as 1 1/2 miles, as they have been hidden and strewn over the ocean floor by waves and, in a number of instances over hundreds of years, extreme weather events like severe hurricanes.
Tucked underneath all of that sand, explorers have identified thousands of objects that once came from the Maravillas, and carefully mapped each item found. The trail of relics includes roughly 11,000 olive jar fragments, almost 3,000 silver coins, 828 lead musket balls and 125 emeralds and amethysts. Working under the government's license, AllenX has recovered more than 10,000 artifacts overall from the Maravillas, including pendants, gold chains, silver bars and crucifixes, much of which was found remarkably intact.
Contrary to what the deluge of past explorers probing the wreck site might indicate, AllenX confirms in its latest report that "the Maravillas has not been salvaged into oblivion," adding, "significant archaeological remains survive."
"Not only have intrinsically significant artifacts beaten the odds, so have assemblages of material of technological, socio-economic and religious significance," the company writes. A number of items identified and mapped from the Maravillas help understand what life was like on the ship, with AllenX saying that two swivel guns were once installed along the deck "to fire on attackers trying to board the ship or rake enemy ships at close range."
"Personal belongings and contraband from the officers' and passengers' quarters are especially common," the report says. "They range from navigational equipment and the Chinese porcelain and majolica from Seville and Pueblo in Mexico that officers and passengers ate off with silver forks to gold and gem inlaid jewelry, chest keys, swords and smuggled emeralds and amethysts."
- In:
- Shipwreck
- Bahamas
Emily Mae Czachor is a reporter and news editor at CBSNews.com. She covers breaking news, often focusing on crime and extreme weather. Emily Mae has previously written for outlets including the Los Angeles Times, BuzzFeed and Newsweek.
Twitter InstagramveryGood! (797)
Related
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- This week on Sunday Morning (October 8)
- Deadly Thai mall shooting exposes murky trade in blank handguns that are turned into lethal weapons
- Slovakia halts military aid for Ukraine as parties that oppose it negotiate to form a new government
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- Biden says he couldn’t divert funds for miles of a US-Mexico border wall, but doesn’t think it works
- Chocolate factory ignored worker concerns before blast that killed 7, feds find
- Sam Bankman-Fried stole at least $10 billion, prosecutors say in fraud trial
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Report of fatal New Jersey car crash fills in key gap in Menendez federal bribery investigation
Ranking
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Rolling candy sold nationwide recalled after death of 7-year-old
- Pat Fitzgerald sues Northwestern after firing in wake of hazing probe
- Donald Trump may visit the Capitol to address Republicans as they pick a new speaker, AP sources say
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Thousands of US workers are on strike today. Here’s a rundown of major work stoppages happening now
- Ukrainian gymnast wins silver at world championships. Olympic spot is up in the air
- South Africa bird flu outbreaks see 7.5 million chickens culled, causing poultry and egg shortages
Recommendation
San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
Late-night talk shows coming back after going dark for 5 months due of writers strike
Starbucks is distributing coffee beans it developed to protect supply from climate change effects
Report on Virginia Beach mass shooting recommends more training for police and a fund for victims
New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
US moves closer to underground testing of nuclear weapons stockpile without any actual explosions
Trump drops $500 million lawsuit against former attorney Michael Cohen
AP Week in Pictures: Asia | Sept. 29-Oct. 5, 2023