Yahoo – AFP,
Paula Carrillo, 6 Dec 2015
Cartagena
(Colombia) (AFP) - Colombia says it has found the shipwreck of a storied
Spanish galleon laden with gold, silver and precious stones, three centuries
after it was sunk by the British in the Caribbean.
"This
is the most valuable treasure that has been found in the history of
humanity," President Juan Manuel Santos declared on Saturday.
He was
speaking from the northern port city of Cartagena, close to where experts made
the hugely valuable find.
Treasure
hunters had searched for the ship for decades, described by some as the holy
grail of shipwrecks.
The loot is
estimated to be worth around $2 billion, its value having dropped significantly
due to the falling price of silver, according to US-based company Sea Search
Armada.
SSA, whose
subsidiary claimed in the early 1980s that it had found the galleon's final
resting place, was engaged in a long-running battle with the government of
Colombia.
The find
was not confirmed and a US court ultimately ruled it was Colombian property.
The San
Jose has long been the source of fascination and popular legends, and even
figures in Gabriel Garcia Marquez's "Love in the Time of Cholera."
Mystery
solved after centuries
Although
they found plenty of other wrecks, the San Jose's location had remained a
mystery until now.
The San
Jose was sunk in June 1708 near the Islas del Rosario, off Colombia's Caribbean
coast, during combat with British ships attempting to take its cargo, as part
of the War of Spanish Succession.
The galleon
was the main ship in a treasure fleet carrying gold, silver and other valuable
items from Spain's American colonies to King Philip V.
Only a
handful of the ship's crew of 600 survived when the San Jose sank.
A team of
Colombian and foreign researchers, including a veteran of the group that
discovered the wreck of the Titanic in 1985, studied winds and currents of the
Caribbean 307 years ago and delved into colonial archives in Spain and Colombia
searching for clues.
Experts
confirmed that they found the San Jose on November 27 "in a place never
before referenced by previous research," Santos said.
At least
five other major shipwrecks were discovered when searching the ocean floor.
The experts
confirmed that they located the San Jose, which was lying on its side,
identifying it by its unique bronze cannons with engraved dolphins.
"The
amount and type of the material leave no doubt of the identity" of the
shipwreck, said Ernesto Montenegro, head of the Colombian Institute of
Anthropology and History.
There could
be up to 1,000 shipwrecks off the Caribbean coast of Colombia, but of those
only between six and 10 had a large cargo of treasures, anthropologist Fabian
Sanabria told AFP.
The biggest
find, and the most sought after, was the San Jose, he said.
The
discovery "is an unprecedented event for the country," said Cartagena
Mayor Dionisio Velez.
On Twitter,
the issue was trending under #GaleonSanJose, as users of the one-to-many social
network debated whether to return the loot to Spain, and made various estimates
about its current value.


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