Monday, July 23, 2018
By AVA TURNQUEST
Tribune Chief Reporter
aturnquest@tribunemedia.net
TREASURE hunters seen scanning Bahamian waters and uncovering artifacts from historic wrecks on the Discovery Channel were given permits to film and research by the Bahamas government.
However, the crews were not permitted to disturb or salvage wreck sites, according to Antiquities Monuments & Museum Corporation Director Keith Tinker, who told The Tribune the team was ordered to return its haul.
The Tribune contacted Dr Tinker after a promotional clip of the season’s second premiere of “Cooper’s Treasure” raised protest from Bahamians on social media.
“We gave the authority for them to come in to film – absolutely no salvage whatsoever, that should not even have been a consideration that they made,” Dr Tinker said.
“My understanding is that they haven’t taken anything, that they were searching and it is something that was authorised. They were supposed to be filming, not disturbing or pulling up anything.”
For the season two premiere, host and treasure hunter Darrel Miklos went to Acklins in a bid to finish the expedition of 1960s NASA astronaut Gordon Cooper, who was said to have plotted 11 wreck sites. Mr Miklos and his crew utilised technology to re-examine the astronaut’s map – purportedly made from space. A key tool in their arsenal was said to be a magnetometer – a sensor that scans the earth’s magnetic field to detect the presence of metals.
In the promotional clip, it is suggested Mr Cooper’s map describes 290 tons of treasure.
The team can be seen sifting through wreck sites,and there is a brief shot of them lifting what appears to be a pipe out of the water and on to their boat.
Yesterday, Mr Tinker said: “We had a senior officer, at times more than one, attached to that crew and on their boat.
“We had our ears and eyes out there. One of our officers was on the boat the entire time they were here.
“It was reported to me they had recovered something down south and I instructed them to return it. The permit they had was just simply to research and film. Apparently they were doing some salvage, and I also watched that clip and share similar concerns.
“I’m supposed to meet with them because they want to continue and I said no, not under those circumstances.”
Mr Miklos’ bid to salvage in Bahamian waters follow’s his father’s track to obtain proper licencing — which was covered by Tribune Business in 2014.
Roger Miklos, an industry veteran, has long-standing ties to the Bahamas, having met and married his wife here and lived here for several years in the 1990s.
He first applied for a wreck/salvage licence in the Bahamas in 1993, only for the then-government to put a moratorium on such activities.
But, when the outgoing Ingraham administration seemingly lifted the moratorium in 2012, Roger Miklos “rushed back” with his new application only to be stalled again.
In 2014, his pursuit drew some controversy when Tribune Business obtained a letter from AMMC Chairman Courtney Strachan to the Key West-based applicant.
In the letter, Mr Strachan promised the elder Miklos to “personally pursue” then Prime Minister Perry Christie for an approval if a $22 million donation to the Historic Bahamas Foundation was secured.
However, Mr Strachan later denied that underwater salvage/exploration licence approvals were being tied to multi-million dollar donations to preserve historic Bahamian sites.
Comments
Baha10 says...
What “pipe”, that was a Swivel Cannon that was pulled out of the Sea and transported away ... along the other Artifacts?!? Just watch the Episode ... and this is the 1st Episode of a Multi-Episode Series that has already completed filming ... bit late to address now ... plus, imagine what was not filmed!
Posted 23 July 2018, 5:22 p.m. Suggest removal
TalRussell says...
Ma Comrades back in 2013 the Christie administration swore they would “wipe out" every owed billions dollars national debt with its moving forward to permit 10 of the 17 applications on file seeking permission conduct wreck/treasure salvaging and exploration in we waters. Salvaging companies promised spend millions and millions instant dollars when given the go ahead... all made possible under the former Papa Hubert administration's passing of the Antiquities, Monuments and Museums Act....monies from all the artifacts to be recovered from Bahamland waters and the division of resulting profits to PublicPuse. { This stuff too deep make up }.
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Posted 23 July 2018, 5:51 p.m. Suggest removal
jamesoberg says...
Congratulations on a very informative and level-headed article.
Your treatment of the CLAIMS of a space map from astronaut Cooper is very fair, nobody in the spaceflight industry believes such a map was EVER made from space, these are fabulous stories Cooper told in his old age, and the evidence for them was apparently later contrived by the television program.
Posted 24 July 2018, 9:31 a.m. Suggest removal
jamesoberg says...
I'm a space program veteran and a spaceflight historian [www.jamesoberg.com]. My own conclusions are:
1. There is no way — and no reason — for the Pentagon to put a secret remote-sensing device on Mercury-9 to seek Soviet missile bases. Miklos says it was trolled on a line like his underwater magnetometer — that doesn’t even WORK in the vacuum of space.
2. Cooper had scant time for sight-seeing and only had one available daylight pass over Turks & Caicos, when he was fully occupied with other experiments.
3. Cooper only took a few dozen photographs [the “five thousand” quotation is bogus, faked from separate comments on unrelated subjects]. There wasn’t room inside the spacecraft for film cartridges holding thousands of exposures.
4. None were over the Caribbean. And none showed anything smaller than cities.
5. There was no way Cooper could glance out the window, see something anomalous, and write down the latitude/longitude for later reference [Miklos says he used GPS, which hadn’t been invented for decades yet]. Nor was there any cockpit display of latitude/longitude.
6. There was no way Cooper could keep a secret notebook in flight and not show it to NASA.
7. There is no way on Gemini that a 35-mm camera out the window could take a photograph straight down that allowed auto license plates to be read.
My debunking of the ‘secret sensor’ and ‘five thousand photos’ -- http://www.thespacereview.com/article/3…
The sad story of Cooper’s wild imaginary stories in his final years.
Loss of Faith -- Gordon Cooper’s post-NASA stories http://www.thespacereview.com/article/3…
Posted 24 July 2018, 10:45 a.m. Suggest removal
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