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Re: trueblue post# 55670

Thursday, 03/14/2019 6:35:00 PM

Thursday, March 14, 2019 6:35:00 PM

Post# of 77054
Quote: The Buried, in the mud, for centuries wreck, under years of mud. Close your eyes and we'll give you a 3 square mile area to find something that could be2' x 2' x 3' long, or smaller! This is the reason for the new equipment their working on! JMO
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Excuse me for having to say this but that is a very naive statement. One is not looking for fragments of silver plates or a burial mask. One is looking for a shipwreck. Those that look for and find shipwrecks are familiar with the obvious;

Multiple cannons, anchors (if not used and lost during the storm) tons of ballast rocks, lower hull structures, olive jars (intact and hundreds plus of shards) always telltale of a Spanish shipwreck, ceramics, small arms, black glass bottles, silver, pewter and talavera earthenware dining services, utensils and cooking pots, navigational instruments, silver and gold bullion and coins (tons). These things are not only found in the nucleus of the wreck site but also in the outer parameters.

As I stated before, there are three primary applications of remote sensing that find Spanish Colonial shipwrecks (proven over and over). magnetometer, sub-bottom profiling, deep penetrating ferrous / non-ferrous metal detection, and in applicable cases these-scan sonar. The mud or zero visibility doesn't matter so that is no excuse. If a wreck lies with the area and a 'professional' survey had been performed, the wreck would have been found. Oh well, find all Tinkerbell is coming to the rescue right. Oh what a show.
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