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Only a handful of survivors were left and they were taken ashore to face trial in Boston. Cyprian Southack, a cartographer, was also hired to note the location of the shipwreck and gather treasures for the crown. Before beginning his career of pillage and plunder, Bellamy first sailed to Cape Cod in or early He then traveled to Florida in search of treasure and then turned to piracy, the society said.
He may have been returning to the Cape to see Hallett when his ship sank, killing all but two of the men on board, according to the society. Clifford said he grew up hearing stories about Bellamy and the Whydah from his uncle. What do visitors see when they visit your laboratory as part of their tour of the Pirate Museum? Chris Macort,, left, teaching at the Whydah Pirate Museum. Macort : When we dive on the Whydah site, we are discovering treasures that go back to the 17th century.
But, when we bring them back to the laboratory we are discovering all over again. And this time, museum visitors are experiencing the revelations right alongside us. It begins with identifying the shadows and shapes of a coin, pistol, a piece of jewelry encased in the concrete. Visitors can view the tantalizing possibilities right on our screens. Then, we have to agonizingly chip away and extract the artifacts with tiny tools. Look right there, you see.
Those are silver Spanish coins, but that long shape that looks like it is wrapping around the X-ray. Why are all the concretions, from the giant one in the middle of the lab to the smaller ones on your workshop — including the one labeled as gun parts -immersed in water? Macort : If they are allowed to dry, the concretion surrounding the object begins to fall apart.
Regular tap water works for storage, but rain water and distilled water have a higher PH level that allows them to inhibit corrosion much more efficiently. Macort : For very large concretions, we can use an air scribe, which is like a mini-jack hammer that gently taps it without harming the artifacts inside.
And as soon as we extract the artifacts, we have to keep them wet while cleaning and then conserving them. Once exposed to air and light, it is critical to eliminate all the sodium chloride, salt, which will begin corroding the artifact.
Macort: Concretion is what protects and preserves so many of the artifacts you see at the museum. When iron is submerged in sea water, they undergo electrolytic reactions.
The metal starts to disintegrate and combine with the salts present in the ocean water. While the concretion stays submerged in salt water, most of the objects inside stay relatively stable.
But when the concretion is brought to the surface and allowed to dry, the objects inside will deteriorate, as I explained before. On average, they weigh about pounds.
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