our side of the story

piratediver

Sr. Member
Jun 29, 2006
264
6
newport, Rhode Island
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Good piece from N.Y. Times today which speaks positively of treasure hunting, simply amazing!

On another note, I will keep everyone posted on this season of diving on the WHYDAH.


Pirate Diver



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June 8, 2007
Op-Ed Contributor
Curators Under the Sea
By ROBERT KURSON
Chicago

LAST month, a Florida-based treasure-hunting company made perhaps the richest undersea score ever. It discovered, somewhere in the Atlantic, a Colonial-era shipwreck containing more than 500,000 silver coins and hundreds of gold coins. Total estimated value, according to one coin marketer: $500 million.

In days of yore, pirates would have swarmed to such a bounty, declaring the treasure their own. Today, it attracts a new breed of raiders who believe just as strongly that the treasure is rightfully theirs — and who get just as angry when things don’t go their way. They are the academics — professors, curators, historians and others who study, archive and preserve historical artifacts. Many of them despise the commercial treasure hunters for, as they see it, rampaging through shipwrecks with little regard for the delicate history at hand.

They claim that because the professional treasure hunter’s first priority is to sell what he finds, artifacts will be rushed from shipwreck to market without being carefully preserved or photographed and cataloged to record their historic value. They charge that even if the treasure hunter cared to preserve and catalog his discoveries, he couldn’t, because he is not properly trained to do such subtle and delicate work.

One professor recently summed up these arguments by saying, “If these guys went and planted a bunch of dynamite around the Sphinx, or tore up the floor of the Acropolis, they’d be in jail in a minute.”

The same case was made in 1991, when two recreational scuba divers discovered a World War II German U-boat — complete with its 56-man crew — that had sunk just off New Jersey. No military expert or historian had known of this wreck, its sailors or its story, and so it fell to these two ordinary men to embark on a six-year, fantastically dangerous quest to solve the mystery.

As it happened, there was no treasure aboard this U-boat, but academics made virtually the same accusation: the divers, they said, were going to trample history in their quest to put a name on the warship.

Nothing could have been further from the truth. Not for the divers who undertook huge risks to preserve the U-boat. And not for treasure hunters, who have even greater incentives to be careful with their finds.

The treasure hunter’s livelihood depends on keeping his discoveries in pristine condition. He knows that coins and gold and pottery must be handled with exquisite care in order to bring the highest possible price. He must use a surgeon’s touch with every artifact, because even that last lonely vase has value if it is deftly handled. The roughest and toughest of these treasure hunters have some of the gentlest hands in the world.

Do they know how to handle the rarities they find? The academics scoff at the idea. But many of the finest conservation labs, the most up-to-date equipment and the best-trained archaeologists can be found on just the kind of treasure hunting quest that discovered the recent Colonial-era wreck.

Odyssey Marine Exploration, the company that recovered the treasure, had two archaeologists supervise the effort, and it tested various processes for preserving the coins before choosing the one that was most effective. This preservation work continues. But even on smaller operations, it’s a good bet that a grizzled, lifelong salvage diver has better real-life, tight-squeeze shipwreck experience than an archaeologist who writes up guidelines for this work from his office near the student union.

It is true that not all treasure hunters photograph and document every square inch of the shipwrecks they discover. Most of them cannot fathom a reason to do so. Waves and storms have been throwing shipwrecks around for centuries, constantly shifting their contents. “I could take some pictures and make some notes,” they’ll tell you, “but that’ll only show what it looked like this afternoon. Tomorrow afternoon it will be different.” Some treasure hunters think the academics’ desire to catalog the location of every bent tin of beans is a bit excessive, though that’s not always the word they use.

The real bottom line is this: if treasure hunters didn’t do this kind of work, no one would. Without them and the people they work with — the divers, fishermen, tipsters and amateur historians — many of these wrecks would stay lost forever. Without the lure of a big and romantic payoff, no one would even look.

Academics don’t drag magnetometers and side-scan sonar equipment across the seas. They don’t risk their lives, as the U-boat divers did, by removing their air tanks and corkscrewing through a labyrinth. They are not infected by the need to search, not bound to feed their families by keeping history beautiful. The treasure hunter needs to look, and that is always the way things lost forever get found.

Robert Kurson is the author of “Shadow Divers” and, most recently, "Crashing Through: A True Story of Risk, Adventure and the Man Who Dared to See."
 

rgecy

Bronze Member
Jun 14, 2004
1,910
59
Beaufort, SC
Detector(s) used
Garrett Sea Hunter Mk II
Now if we could only get more articles like this out to the public and politicians we may be able to save some of our profession!

Great article! Thanks for posting it here for all to see!

Robert
 

Salvor6

Silver Member
Feb 5, 2005
3,755
2,169
Port Richey, Florida
Detector(s) used
Aquapulse, J.W. Fisher Proton 3, Pulse Star II, Detector Pro Headhunter, AK-47
Primary Interest:
Shipwrecks
Yes, OME has several archaeologists on their payroll including some very experienced conservationists. One of them wrote a book on the glass ware found on the Republic.

Great article! The shadow divers are John Chatterton and Richie Kohler. They made 350' deep dives to the "U-Who" over a period of 6 years to identify it.
 

S

shipresearcher1

Guest
SWR said:
My bad...I thought they meant Archaeologists from Spain ;)

The woman who wrote the book is not a practicing archaeologist. Archaeologists-Neil Cunningham Dobson, Hawk Tolson, Wyatt Yeager.
Yeager is also the conservator who trained under Herb Bump for years although I heard he resigned. Odyssey usually has 2 archaeologists on board. Hope this helps.

SR1
 

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