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[Archport] Builders dig up 17th-century galleon in Argentina

Subject :   [Archport] Builders dig up 17th-century galleon in Argentina
From :   "Alexandre Monteiro" <no.arame@gmail.com>
Date :   Fri, 2 Jan 2009 23:38:57 +0000

Builders dig up 17th-century galleon in Argentina

Mayor of Buenos Aires prays for gold as archaeologists raise Spanish
vessel found while building apartment block

by Giles Tremlett, The Guardian, Wednesday 31 December 2008

Construction workers excavating the foundations of a luxury apartment
block overlooking the river Plate in Buenos Aires may have dug up
something far more valuable than what they are building.

The workmen uncovered the well-preserved remains of a 17th-century
Spanish galleon, one of thousands that carried goods across the
Atlantic when Argentina was a Spanish colony.

Eight metres of silt had covered and conserved the galleon in the 300
years since it sank or was abandoned by colonists.

At that time the exclusive Puerto Madero neighbourhood of the
Argentinian capital was just a beach on the shores of the Plate. "The
galleon was buried under Puerto Madero, in the sedimentation of a
beach where many ships used to arrive centuries ago," explained city
hall officials.

Five large cannons and a cannonball were among the first objects found
by archaeologists who joined the workmen to excavate the site
properly.

Speculation that the galleon may be carrying treasure is rife in
Buenos Aires, with even the mayor, Mauricio Macri, praying for a find.
"I hope there is a great treasure trove on board," he joked. "That way
we can pay for many more public works."

So far, however, the only objects dug up apart from the cannons are
ropes and old jars of olive oil. The galleon appears to have sunk as
it was trying to reach the port at Buenos Aires.

"We feel it must be Spanish because we have not found signs of
anything English," one archaeologist, Marcelo Weissel, told La Nación
newspaper. "Our hypothesis is that it is from the end of the 17th or
the beginning of the 18th century because we have not found any glass
recipients which started appearing from Holland around 1720." Carbon
dating would eventually give a better idea of when the vessel went
down, he said.

Mayor Macri ruled out handing over the galleon's contents to Spain,
saying that it belonged to the people of Buenos Aires.

Hernan Lombardi, the head of the city's culture department, said the
find was unique and city archeologists planned to raise the whole
ship, which would later be opened to the public.

"Now is the time to get down to some careful work," he said.

Development in the Puerto Moreno district began a decade ago. A
complex of apartments, shop and offices is due to go up on the site
where the galleon was found.


http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/dec/31/spanish-galleon-buenos-aires

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