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Yo-Ho-Ho and a Treasure of Fun
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17058 |
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LIFE
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8 / 1990 |
1,779 Words |
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Harvey Hagman Harvey Hagman often writes on adventure and treasure hunting. |
Erick Messing has lived an adventure most teenagers only dream about. At age eleven, he dove down to a Spanish galleon, the Maravillas, sunk deep in the crystal blue waters off the Bahamas, and emerged with an emerald worth thirty seven thousand dollars.
Erick and his father were guests aboard the treasure ship Beacon, which is salvaging the wreck. Invited to dive down for a look, they observed a few old timbers. The Beacon's skipper then turned on the ship's blowers, which deflect the propeller's flow downward, digging craters in the sand in an attempt to trace the wreck's scatter pattern.
Swimming around the walls of these craters, Erick noticed deck spikes, ballast stones, and pottery shards of what turned out to be Ming dynasty china. He and his group deposited their finds in a metal basket, which was winched to the surface.
Erick recalls spotting the gemstone in about forty feet of water: "Coming around the side of the crater, I found a stream of debris and saw the emerald lying in the sand. My dad indicated I should surface right away, so I brought it up to someone on board. It was a dark green fifteen-carat emerald with some flecks of color."
Now fifteen, Erick returns each summer from his Alexandria, Virginia, home to look for treasure.
While most young treasure hunters don't strike riches of this magnitude, their numbers continue to grow. Today, of an estimated 250,000 active American treasure hunters who use metal detectors, about
... (1991 of 10313 Characters)
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