The Star Malaysia

‘Yellow brick road’ leads to US pirate booty

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BREWSTER (Massachuse­tts): He calls it “the yellow brick road” because it’s literally sprinkled with gold dust.

This road runs along the shifting seafloor off Massachuse­tts, and undersea explorer Barry Clifford believes it leads to undiscover­ed treasure from the wreck of the pirate shipWhydah.

About two weeks ago, Clifford and his dive team took a previously unplanned trip back to the wreck site, and Clifford returned more convinced than ever that the road he’s exploring is a path to riches.

TheWhydah sank in a brutal storm in 1717 with plunder from 50 ships on board. Clifford discovered the wreck site in 1984 and has since pulled up 200,000 artifacts, including gold ornaments, sword handles, even a boy’s leg.

But this year, Clifford learned far more treasure may be resting with the Whydah, the only authentica­ted pirate ship wreck in US waters.

Colonial-era documents discovered in April indicated the Whydah raided two vessels in the weeks before it sank.

Its haul on those raids included 400,000 coins, the records said.

A Sept 1 dive uncovered evidence he was near those coins. That convinced Clifford he had to make another trip before summer’s end.

So Clifford and a seven-man crew went back on a three-day trip that ended on Sept 13.

Clifford headed for the “yellow brick road”, which refers to a gold and artifact-strewn path extending between two significan­t sites at the Whydah wreck – a cannon pile and a large chunk of wood Clifford thinks is theWhydah’s stern.

The trove of coins and other treasure likely poured from the stern as the ship broke up and the stern drifted to its rest 300 years ago, he said.

Divers searching the path on the recent trip pulled up several concretion­s, which are rocky masses that form when metals, such as gold and silver, chemically react to seawater.

Diver Jon Matel said one discovery was following another, even though divers were working in “black water”, or zero-visibility.

Matel said several feet of a fine seaweed called mung settled in the excavated pits and it was like diving in a vat of black jelly.

“You’re going by your feel, your touch, your hands, and the ping of a metal detector,” Matel said.

“When that thing goes off, it’s a great feeling.”

X-Rays show all the newly retrieved concretion­s have coins and gold inside.

To Clifford, it’s more proof of high concentrat­ions of metals and coins being dumped en masse on that spot of sea floor.

Clifford believes two examples that were pulled up on the prior trip are particular­ly compelling evidence: a cannonball piled with 11 coins and a piece of iron stacked with 50 coins.

“Did all of those coins just happen to fall on this one little piece of iron? Or were there thousands of coins there, and this is just an example of what’s left?” he said.

Cliffordha­s no doubt it’s the latter, but he’ll have towait until next summer to try to find out.

The worsening weather and lingering boat problems after a recent lightning strike make another visit impossible until June. — AP Source: Malaysian Meteorolog­ical Department/AP

 ??  ?? AM: Isolated thundersto­rms in Johor. Isolated rain over coastal areas in Pahang. Cloudy in Malacca, Perak and Putrajaya. PM: Isolated rain in Kedah. Cloudy in Penang, Perak and Perlis. No rain in other areas. AM: No rain in all areas. PM: Isolated rain...
AM: Isolated thundersto­rms in Johor. Isolated rain over coastal areas in Pahang. Cloudy in Malacca, Perak and Putrajaya. PM: Isolated rain in Kedah. Cloudy in Penang, Perak and Perlis. No rain in other areas. AM: No rain in all areas. PM: Isolated rain...
 ??  ?? Uncovering treasures: Clifford holding the barrel of a partially crushed blunderbus­s he salvaged from the “Whydah” in Brewster. — AP
Uncovering treasures: Clifford holding the barrel of a partially crushed blunderbus­s he salvaged from the “Whydah” in Brewster. — AP

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