Underwater Treasure Explorers

Shipwrecks serve but another purpose should a bold adventurous band of modern explorers toil long hours with their lives at risk to find, dive upon, and recover artifacts lost to ancient ocean perils. At times those dangerous situations lead to new discoveries which may prove old legends and their treasures to finally be true. Considering the sheer number of myths and legends, only a fraction of lost artifacts have been successfully recovered, and many still lurk deep in dark shimmering waters for later discovery. Each cache reclaimed from below unforgiving seas further demonstrates a possibility to recover the treasure of a lifetime, gracefully fueling motivations of new-age treasure hunters without hesitation. To whom we ask, could this fever be attributed to?


Nearly two-hundred years ago, an archaeological pioneer named Heinrich Schliemann stubbornly and relentlessly argued with scientists, profoundly claiming existence of ancient Greek settlements mentioned in Homeric epics to be poetic truths. Heinrich's stubbornness lead to the research and excavations of several important sites now recognized by UNESCO World Heritage. Sites such as ancient Greece's legendary city of Troy, for example. Schliemann started an archaeological revolution, and his discovery of Priam's Treasure ignited a seductive rush to find lost artifacts mentioned in ancient texts, especially those marked with intriguing monetary value. Undoubtedly inspired by Schliemann's work on some level, adventurers James Lockwood and Robert Marx opened the world of archaeological treasure hunters to an entirely new, previously unexplored realm of discovery, incorporating various land excavation techniques underwater with scuba gear.



Lockwood pioneered early underwater film equipment and helped push sport scuba into the mainstream with several of his inventions. Marx is now credited for numerous underwater archaeological discoveries previously a faint blip on global radar. A new world opened up when Marx located Manila and Spanish galleons, uncovered ancient Mayan temple sites, and spearheaded underwater dive explorations of nearly forgotten Mayan Cenotes. The ability to find ancient cities and artifacts buried deep beneath the cresting seas pioneered a new frontier for scientific discovery, one which would prove to be as bountiful as the ocean itself to some decree. Restoration of lost human cultures, every artifact a piece of a puzzle truly valued beyond any monetary sum for the priceless heritage it returned.


Renown undersea explorers Lee Spence and Mel Fisher built upon the work of Marx and Lockwood however, shocking the world with rare sunken relics of historic significance that are extremely valuable treasures by material composition. Fisher and Spence were so successful at sea adventuring they managed to rediscover lost galleons worth over four-hundred million at the dawn of sea exploration, burrowing their way into the imaginations of people world-wide. News headlines of this magnitude inspired many people to become overnight treasure hunters clambering at an opportunity to discover fortune for themselves. 


Gold fever spreads to the masses quickly, especially with staggering monetary value at stake. Precious metals, jewelry, gemstones, and other rarities were an integral part of old-world trading, abundant in their cache concentrations. In modern times, commodities are prized for their materialistic value, rarity, and importantly, the history behind each piece. The use of rare elements to define value of commodities may stay around for centuries to come, as mankind's fascination with gold and jewels stems back to the days precious metals were first discovered. Rare treasures are desired for their captivating beauty, their relationship to wealth, and for the tantalizing tales sometimes attributed to the piece, as the last known surviving memorabilia of predominant historical figures or events. Finding these treasures is to restore lost or forgotten antique craftsmanship once coveted by kings and queens as motivational currencies fueling vast kingdoms and empires throughout the ages.


As with any scientific discipline, advancement of technology allows researchers and underwater adventurers to reclaim history in ways previously unimaginable, though recovering ancient sunken treasures is an arduous task even with modern world innovations. Imagine the effort involved many hundreds of years ago! Salvage operations then were carried out without scuba equipment, without GPS mapping devices or sonar, and a lack of many comfort amenities found on ships today. Crews faced great risks by depending on free diver recovery efforts amongst sharks to hook cargo for manual hoisting aboard a rescue vessel. As technology improved, explorers faced dangers of diving bells and consequently often used slaves to retrieve items given the bell's high mortality rate.


Underwater recovery was slow, arduous, and at times inhumane. Over time, inventions and innovations effectively changed the process, presenting far less danger to achieve the same objective. Brawn, blood, and sweat turned to ingenious solutions with technology. Beyond dangerously intensive manual labor driving technological innovations, treasure reclaimers faced privateers and pirates who were just as eager to partake in treasure hunting. Pirates notoriously picked off salvage operations as easy, identifiable prey. To a pirate, sailing into a recovery operation eliminated some of the guesswork, knowing something valuable must reside below if salvage crews were risking their necks diving for it. 


As much as reclamation teams attempted to disguise the fact, or find ways to distract scavengers, the inevitable pirate onslaught would drive them away if not successful in a timely manor. Unfortunately in modern times, like in the old-world, pirates still exist by running covert operations. They dive on protected wreck sites and look for ways around maritime treasure laws to facilitate their own greed. A bounty of irreplaceable heritage is lost to black markets routinely when this happens, and along with it we lose an intimate knowledge of our ancestors that may not otherwise be told.



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