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Thursday, 03/10/2011 2:07:24 AM

Thursday, March 10, 2011 2:07:24 AM

Post# of 76931
I think they had Seafarers in mind when they made the movie "The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything."

The 1715 fleet wrecks were 1st discovered in the late 1950's and salvors are still finding incredible treasures to this day.

The Atocha, part of the debris trail first discovered in 1970, still yields treasure on an almost daily basis.

Hundreds of coins have been found on the Jupiter wreck, discovered in the early 1980's, over the last few years.

Even a pirate in the Bahamas, working clandestinely, can find treasure from the worked out Maravilla wreck, found in 1972.

And on the Juno Beach wreck, first discovered in 1977.....NADA. ZIP. ZILCH. NOTHING. Hmmmm.

But it's definitely a treasure wreck!!!! (or so goes the cry) We know this because of all the treasure that has been found. Well wait, that can't be right. Oh, because we have a copy of the ship's manifest. Wait, we don't have that either. We don't even have ship name. Or even a potential name. But you know those darn Spaniards, they were terrible record keepers. I know, It must be buried under 30 feet of sand! How convenient!

So "allegedly" a handful of days were spent last year digging with the m/v Virgilona. They couldn't hit bottom using that vessel. Nothing was found. And now the Virgilona is going away-Mr. Keith Webb has much better use for it on the productive Santa Margarita shipwreck. So that leaves the permit-less Seafarers, on a treasure wreck without treasure with the rust bucket vessel Iron Maiden, which couldn't dig it's way out of a wet paper bag. Good luck to yer!

And has anyone bothered to read the drivel at the top of this forum? Is a 14 year old kid writing those "releases?"
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