Tommi
Sr. Member
- Sep 19, 2005
- 290
- 14
- Detector(s) used
- Famous-Trails-MD9100 ACE250-PRO
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
Hello fellow TH's
I'm in Australia, and I'm searching for a shipwreck that was suppose to have sunk in Australia before Captain Cook even arrived on our shore. Now what happens if I find it?
Under a declaration made under the Historic Shipwrecks Act, all wrecks which are more than 75 years old are protected, together with their associated relics. So I can assume that the Federal Gov. would step in and say its there ship now even though its suppose to be a Galleon from another Country.
Australia's historic shipwrecks form an invaluable, limited and irreplaceable resource. The Historic Shipwrecks Act 1976 , which is administered by this Department, protects historic wrecks and relics in Commonwealth waters, extending from below the low water mark to the edge of the continental shelf. Each of the States and the Northern Territory has complementary legislation, which protects historic shipwrecks in State waters, such as bays, harbours and rivers.
Now the ship I am after is above the low water mark, and maybe 1.5miles from the shoreline.
And to make matters even worse for myself, it is located within the grounds of a National Park, which means nothing can be disturbed.
So, if I locate the wreck should I:
A, Tell the Gov. and hope for some kind of finders fee?
B, Be a modern day pirate, and get what I can as fast as I can
I can argue that the gov. hasn't made any efforts in locating the shipwreck, or even trying to find out if it really exists.
That said, I must also include that the Australian Government does not like the idea of its history to be challenged, for example, it has been documented that 3 Egyptian Hieroglyphics sites have been found on Australia's mainland, only one site hasn't been destroyed, the two others were broken up and dumped in the sea. The remaining one is in a National Park and bit to big to be broken up without any Greene's noticing.
(Awareness Quest is a site with many strange artifacts that have been found in Australia. http://www.awarenessquest.com/ )
I'm in Australia, and I'm searching for a shipwreck that was suppose to have sunk in Australia before Captain Cook even arrived on our shore. Now what happens if I find it?
Under a declaration made under the Historic Shipwrecks Act, all wrecks which are more than 75 years old are protected, together with their associated relics. So I can assume that the Federal Gov. would step in and say its there ship now even though its suppose to be a Galleon from another Country.
Australia's historic shipwrecks form an invaluable, limited and irreplaceable resource. The Historic Shipwrecks Act 1976 , which is administered by this Department, protects historic wrecks and relics in Commonwealth waters, extending from below the low water mark to the edge of the continental shelf. Each of the States and the Northern Territory has complementary legislation, which protects historic shipwrecks in State waters, such as bays, harbours and rivers.
Now the ship I am after is above the low water mark, and maybe 1.5miles from the shoreline.
And to make matters even worse for myself, it is located within the grounds of a National Park, which means nothing can be disturbed.
So, if I locate the wreck should I:
A, Tell the Gov. and hope for some kind of finders fee?
B, Be a modern day pirate, and get what I can as fast as I can
I can argue that the gov. hasn't made any efforts in locating the shipwreck, or even trying to find out if it really exists.
That said, I must also include that the Australian Government does not like the idea of its history to be challenged, for example, it has been documented that 3 Egyptian Hieroglyphics sites have been found on Australia's mainland, only one site hasn't been destroyed, the two others were broken up and dumped in the sea. The remaining one is in a National Park and bit to big to be broken up without any Greene's noticing.
(Awareness Quest is a site with many strange artifacts that have been found in Australia. http://www.awarenessquest.com/ )