Ocean Vehicle Finds 200-Year-Old Shipwrecks, Gold Coins, Cannons 900m Under Caribbean; Could Be Worth Billions

Ocean Vehicle Finds 200-Year-Old Shipwrecks, Gold Coins, Cannons 900m Under Caribbean; Could Be Worth Billions
(Colombia Presidency, Colombia Navy Handout via AP)
Reuters
6/11/2022
Updated:
6/14/2022

Colombian naval officials conducting underwater monitoring of the long-sunken San Jose galleon have discovered two other historical shipwrecks nearby, President Ivan Duque said on Monday, June 6.

The San Jose galleon, a 62-gun, 3-masted ship that sank during a battle with British ships in the War of Spanish Succession, thought by historians to be carrying treasure that would be as much as $17 billion, sank in 1708 near Colombia’s Caribbean port of Cartagena.

Its potential recovery has been the subject of litigation for decades.

(Colombia Presidency, Colombia Navy Handout via AP)
(Colombia Presidency, Colombia Navy Handout via AP)
(Colombia Presidency, Colombia Navy Handout via AP)
(Colombia Presidency, Colombia Navy Handout via AP)
(Colombia Presidency, Colombia Navy Handout via AP)
(Colombia Presidency, Colombia Navy Handout via AP)

A remotely operated vehicle reached 900 meters depth, Duque and naval officials said in a video statement, allowing new videos of the wreckage.

The vehicle also discovered two other nearby wrecks — a colonial boat and a schooner thought to be from around the same period as Colombia’s war for independence from Spain, some 200 years ago.

“We now have two other discoveries in the same area, that show other options for archaeological exploration,” navy commander Admiral Gabriel Perez said. “So the work is just beginning.”

The images offer the best-yet view of the treasure that was aboard the San Jose — including gold ingots and coins, silver, emeralds, cannons made in Seville in 1655, and an intact Chinese dinner service.

(Colombia Presidency, Colombia Navy Handout via AP)

Archaeologists from the navy and government are working to determine the origin of the plates based on inscriptions, the officials said.

“Our government decided that all that treasure is a unified patrimony that cannot be broken up, cannot be separated, and that in its entirety has enormous patrimony richness,” Duque said. “There were obviously differences of legal matters that we’ve advanced with the Minister of Culture, as well as with the Defense Judicial Agency to resolve it.”

He added, “The idea is to recover it and to have sustainable financing mechanisms for future extractions. In this way we protect the treasure, the patrimony of the San Jose galleon.”

(Colombia Presidency, Colombia Navy Handout via AP)
(Colombia Presidency, Colombia Navy Handout via AP)
(Colombia Presidency, Colombia Navy Handout via AP)
(Colombia Presidency, Colombia Navy Handout via AP)
(Colombia Presidency, Colombia Navy Handout via AP)
(Colombia Presidency, Colombia Navy Handout via AP)
(Colombia Presidency, Colombia Navy Handout via AP)
(Colombia Presidency, Colombia Navy Handout via AP)
AP contributed to this report.
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