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Treasure hunter seeks federal permit to continue to explore 1715 shipwrecks for treasure - MSNThere's gold in them thar waters. So a Sebastian treasure hunter is seeking a federal permit to keep searching for treasures among 10 Spanish ships that sank just offshore of the Treasure Coast ...
A Sebastian treasure hunter is seeking a 20-year permit renewal to continue salvaging artifacts from 10 Spanish shipwrecks. The proposed salvage operation involves using various methods, including ...
Florida family of explorers discovers treasure from 1715 shipwreck 02:46. More than 300 years ago, fleets of Spanish galleons set sail from the waters off the Americas to bring back vast amounts ...
Over the years, divers and treasure hunters on land and sea have come across treasures from the 1715 Spanish Fleet.
Finding the 214 coins and other artifacts they salvaged from the Spanish shipwrecks known as the 1715 Treasure Fleet, is rare, they explained, because they have been salvaged for decades.
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission announced they have recovered 37 stolen gold coins from the historic 1715 Spanish Fleet shipwrecks that occurred off the Treasure Coast.
Treasure hunting or exploring the wreckage is only attainable by obtaining a permit to visit or recover artifacts on state-owned lands underwater. Currently, 1715 Fleet-Queens Jewels LLC owns ...
Florida treasure hunters recover hundreds of 18th century coins from Spanish shipwrecks. The ships, known as the 1715 Treasure Fleet, went down off the coast of Indian River County during a hurricane.
The 1715 Fleet was a combination of two different groups of Spanish ships, all under one command, heading back to Spain following a successful round of treasure hunting.
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