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Topic: 1733 in archaeology


  
  Fleet of 1733   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
In the 1960s, most of the wrecks associated with the 1733 fleet were relocated by modern divers.
The 1733 sites represent some of the oldest artificial reefs in North America, supporting complex ecosystems of marine life that have thrived generation after generation over the centuries.
The real “treasure” of the 1733 fleet is the opportunity to visit the living remains of ships from an era long gone.
dhr.dos.state.fl.us /archaeology/underwater/galleontrail/fleetOf1733.htm   (547 words)

  
 1733 Gold Coins Rebuttal - TreasureExpeditions.com: Archaeology, Treasure Hunting & Shipwreck Recovery
I believe it is time for the salvagers of the 1733 fleet to step forward and advise the public that there WERE gold coins recovered from these ships and begin documenting those coins that were recovered by the salvors-or were personally seen being recovered by the salvage community.
He purchased that coin, as well as a 1733 MX "pillar dollar" that Craig had recovered from the Infante one day while I was diving with him.
The 1733 fleet hurricane had only eight to ten foot waves that drove the galleons onto the Florida reefs, where they bilged their bottoms but were still pretty much intact after the hurricane.
www.treasureexpeditions.com /1733-Coins-Rebuttal.htm   (1895 words)

  
 New Georgia Encyclopedia: Savannah City Plan
It is unique in the history of urban planning in a number of respects, not the least of which is that the squares allow for more open space in Savannah than in any city layout in history.
Founded in 1733, Savannah is situated on a forty-foot-high bluff overlooking the Savannah River, eighteen miles from the Atlantic Ocean.
Laid out by General James Edward Oglethorpe, it was the last colonial capital to be established by Britain in America.
www.georgiaencyclopedia.org /nge/Article.jsp?id=h-2547   (1130 words)

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