The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Robot submarine finds the ‘Holy Grail of shipwrecks’

- By Cleve R. Wootson Jr.

Spanish treasure fleets that traversed the Atlantic Ocean to the Americas and back were a 16th century invention as important as free two-day shipping. Organized 70 years after Columbus’ first voyage, the fleet was made up of several specialize­d ships with one primary goal: Exploiting the riches of the New World as efficientl­y as possible.

The San José, the largest galleon and the flagship of one group of Spanish ships that started sailing in the 16th century, was big and - thanks to 62 bronze cannons engraved with dolphins - deadly enough to deter or destroy ships, whether pirates or rival nations.

Except when it didn’t. On June 8, 1708, during the War of the Spanish Succession, the San José’s gunpowder ignited during a battle with British ships, sending 600 doomed sailors to the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean along with gold, silver and emeralds from mines in Peru, a total haul valued at some $17 billion in today’s dollars.

It stands as one of the most expensive maritime losses in history. And “the Holy Grail of shipwrecks” stayed underwater, undiscover­ed for more than 300 years.

Enter a tiny submersibl­e robot named Remus 6000 - packed with sensors and cameras and capable of diving 4 miles underwater - that has discovered the centuries-old final resting place of the sunken ship.

The unmanned underwater vehicle, operated by Woods Hole Oceanograp­hic Institutio­n (WHOI), uses far-reaching sonar to identify objects on the seafloor then circles back to take pictures of anything worthy of a closer look.

Remus 6000 has used the same tactic to find the remains of Air France 447, two years after it crashed off the coast of Brazil in 2009.

The wreckage of the San José was discovered two years ago, but the location off the Colombian port town of Cartagena and other details have been closely-held secrets.

New details were released on Monday from the agencies involved in the search, including the Colombian military that ferried Remus 6000 to the search location.

Researcher­s realized what they had found from a key distinguis­hing feature.

The small craft descended to just 30 feet above the wreck and snapped photos of those unique cannons.

Jeff Kaeli, one of the engineers who operates the Remus 6000, said he was in his bunk when the first pictures came in.

“I’m not a marine archaeolog­ist, but ... I know what a cannon looks like,” he told CBS News. “So in that moment, I guess I was the only person in the world who knew we’d found the shipwreck,” he said.

Those who know the coordinate­s of the find have not expanded much beyond the robot and the engineer in part because the remains of the San José are the subject of another internatio­nal dispute:

Do the precious metals and emeralds at the bottom of the Atlantic belong to the people of Colombia or to the people of Spain?

“The San José discovery carries considerab­le cultural and historical significan­ce for the Colombian government and people because of the ship’s treasure of cultural and historical artifacts and the clues they may provide about Europe’s economic, social, and political climate in the early 18th century,” WHOI said in a news release about the find.

“The Colombian Government plans to build a museum and world-class conservati­on laboratory to preserve and publicly display the wreck’s contents, including cannons, ceramics, and other artifacts.”

Still the researcher­s at Woods Hole say they have no financial stake in the haul.

 ?? REMUS IMAGE, WOODS HOLE OCEANOGRAP­HIC INSTITUTIO­N ?? To confirm the wreck’s identity, REMUS descended to just 30 feet above the wreck where it was able to capture photos of a key feature of the San José — its cannons.
REMUS IMAGE, WOODS HOLE OCEANOGRAP­HIC INSTITUTIO­N To confirm the wreck’s identity, REMUS descended to just 30 feet above the wreck where it was able to capture photos of a key feature of the San José — its cannons.

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