#ShipWreck
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
blueiscoool · 9 hours ago
Text
Tumblr media
$1 Million Worth of Gold Coins Stolen From 18th-Century Shipwrecks Found
After an extensive investigation, Florida officials recovered dozens of gold coins valued at more than $1 million that were stolen from a shipwreck recovery nine years ago.
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission announced in a news release Tuesday it had recovered 37 gold coins that were stolen from the 1715 Fleet shipwrecks.
The fleet of Spanish ships sailed from Havana, Cuba and headed to Seville, Spain on July 24, 1715. The journey was short-lived, as a hurricane wrecked the fleet just seven days later off the coast of Eastern Florida.
The first ship was discovered in 1928 by William Beach north of Fort Pierce, Florida, about 120 miles south of Orlando. Since then, gold and silver artifacts have been recovered offshore for decades following the first discovery.
In 2015, a group of contracted salvage operators found a treasure trove of 101 gold coins from the wrecks near Florida’s Treasure Coast, about 112 miles west of Orlando. However, only half of the coins were reported correctly. The other 50 coins were not disclosed and later stolen.
The years-long investigation by the state’s fish and wildlife conservation commission and FBI “into the theft and illegal trafficking of these priceless historical artifacts” came to a head when new evidence emerged in June, the news release said.
The evidence linked Eric Schmitt to the illegal sale of multiple stolen gold coins in 2023 and 2024, officials said. Schmitt’s family had been contracted to work as salvage operators for the US District Courts’ custodian and salvaging company for the fleet, 1715 Fleet - Queens Jewels, LLC. The Schmitts had uncovered the 101 gold coins in 2015.
During their hunt for the coins, investigators executed multiple search warrants and recovered coins from private residences, safe deposit boxes and auctions, the news release said. Five stolen coins were retrieved from a Florida-based auctioneer, who unknowingly purchased them from Schmitt.
Investigators used advanced digital forensics to nail down Schmitt as a suspect in the case. In most cases, digital forensics can recover data stored electronically on devices such as a cell phone, computer system or memory module.
With the help of advanced digital forensics, investigators identified metadata and geolocation data that linked Schmitt to a photograph of the stolen coins taken at the Schmitt family condominium in Fort Pierce, Florida.
Authorities said Schmitt also took three of the stolen gold coins and put them on the ocean floor in 2016. The coins were later found by the new investors of the fleet’s court custodian and salvaging company.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Throughout the investigation, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission worked closely with historical preservation experts to authenticate and appraise the recovered coins sold by Schmitt.
Schmitt is facing charges for dealing in stolen property, the release says.
The company commissioned to salvage the shipwreck said in a statement it “was shocked and disappointed by this theft and has worked closely with law enforcement and the state of Florida regarding this matter.”
“We take our responsibilities as custodian very seriously and will always seek to enforce the laws governing these wrecks,” the statement read.
Recovered artifacts will be returned to their rightful custodians, the news release said. But the investigation is far from over: 13 coins remain missing.
Tumblr media
24 notes · View notes
illustratus · 16 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
Life Saving Patrol by Edward Moran
2K notes · View notes
hikayaking · 8 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
A cool hike to the remnants of the Pezuta, a wood-hulled steam freighter that ran aground on the Eastern side of Haida Gwaii.
4K notes · View notes
lionfloss · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
MS World Discoverer was a German expedition cruise ship. It hit an uncharted reef in the Sandfly Passage 29. April 2000. The hole was too big to get it repaired on the spot, so all the guests were taken ashore. A few hours later the captain ran the ship full speed on ground in Rodrick bay. (via sv_manjana)
12K notes · View notes
balkanparamo · 14 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
The Shipwreck: Lost at Sea
449 notes · View notes
ltwilliammowett · 1 month ago
Text
Tumblr media
Shipwreck hidden in the mangroves at Blind Bight, Victoria, Australia, 19th century
516 notes · View notes
dutchs-blog · 6 months ago
Text
Amazing Found
710 notes · View notes
vivtanner · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Excited to be part of @terrorcamp this year ⚓️
For this occasion, my artbook Naufrage containing 20 shipwreck illustrations & more is available for purchase as a digital version all weekend. Also check out all the cool artists & panels at the Terror Camp III Polar Fan Conference!
1K notes · View notes
salligora · 8 days ago
Text
Sometimes I do animated YCHs on FA but wanted to post this one here because I like how it turned out
also sturgeonposting!!!!
220 notes · View notes
imagine-darksiders · 6 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
To Hell with it. Big humpback whale Ulthane for Mermay.
Y/n is the survivor of a shipwreck and Ulthane, a mer who's lost his entire pod, finds them clinging to a large piece of driftwood, barely staying afloat in the open ocean.
Understanding that humans are predominantly a land-dwelling species, he brings them to a deserted island within his territory, pleased to at last have some company to stave off his isolation.
Y/n is just trying to get off the island, perplexed as to why this gruff, enormous mer keeps leaving them beautiful but functionless seashells, catching fish for them to eat, and otherwise thwarting any attempts they make to swim out into deeper waters.
796 notes · View notes
letmeinimafairy · 9 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Another shipwreck diorama in a shell. Wood, resin, sand and oyster shell
848 notes · View notes
blueiscoool · 5 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
900 Artifacts From Ming Dynasty Shipwrecks Found in South China Sea
The trove of objects—including pottery, porcelain, shells and coins—was found roughly a mile below the surface.
Underwater archaeologists in China have recovered more than 900 artifacts from two merchant vessels that sank to the bottom of the South China Sea during the Ming dynasty.
The ships are located roughly a mile below the surface some 93 miles southeast of the island of Hainan, reports the South China Morning Post’s Kamun Lai. They are situated about 14 miles apart from one another.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
During three phases over the past year, researchers hauled up 890 objects from the first vessel, including copper coins, pottery and porcelain, according to a statement from China’s National Cultural Heritage Administration (NCHA). That’s just a small fraction of the more than 10,000 items found at the site. Archaeologists suspect the vessel was transporting porcelain from Jingdezhen, China, when it sank.
The team recovered 38 items from the second ship, including shells, deer antlers, porcelain, pottery and ebony logs that likely originated from somewhere in the Indian Ocean.
Archaeologists think the ships operated during different parts of the Ming dynasty, which lasted from 1368 to 1644.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Many of the artifacts came from the Zhengde period of the Ming dynasty, which spanned 1505 to 1521. But others may be older, dating back to the time of Emperor Hongzhi, who reigned from 1487 to 1505, as Chris Oberholtz reported last year.
Archaeologists used manned and unmanned submersibles to collect the artifacts and gather sediment samples from the sea floor. They also documented the wreck sites with high-definition underwater cameras and a 3D laser scanner.
The project was a collaboration between the National Center for Archaeology, the Chinese Academy of Science and a museum in Hainan.
“The discovery provides evidence that Chinese ancestors developed, utilized and traveled to and from the South China Sea, with the two shipwrecks serving as important witnesses to trade and cultural exchanges along the ancient Maritime Silk Road,” says Guan Qiang, deputy head of the NCHA, in the agency’s statement.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
During the Ming dynasty, China’s population doubled, and the country formed vital cultural ties with the West. Ming porcelain, with its classic blue and white color scheme, became an especially popular export. China also exported silk and imported new foods, including peanuts and sweet potatoes.
The period had its own distinctive artistic aesthetic. As the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Asian Art writes, “Palace painters excelled in religious themes, moralizing narrative subjects, auspicious bird-and-flower motifs and large-scale landscape compositions.”
The shipwreck treasures aren’t the only recent discoveries in the South China Sea, according to CBS News’ Stephen Smith. Just last month, officials announced the discovery of a World War II-era American Navy submarine off the Philippine island of Luzon.
By Sarah Kuta.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
794 notes · View notes
illustratus · 25 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
Morning after a Stormy Night by Johan Christian Dahl
240 notes · View notes
polarship · 10 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
The Wreck of the Endurance
50 x 60 cm
acrylic on canvas
Instagram INPRNT
179 notes · View notes
lionfloss · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
shipwreck by charliie.b
3K notes · View notes