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- NATION, Page 29American NotesSOUTH CAROLINASunken Garden Of Gold
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- In 1857, on its 44th voyage carrying passengers and gold from
- Panama to New York, the S.S. Central America ran into a killer
- hurricane and sank in 8,000 ft. of water 200 miles off the South
- Carolina coast. On board were an estimated 77,000 ounces of gold
- bullion worth at least $28 million today. Last week a salvage
- syndicate that located the wreck two years ago began recovering
- what engineer Thomas Thompson, 37, said was "like the classic
- sunken treasures you read about as a kid. It is like a garden of
- gold growing from the bottom and hanging from beams. It is dripping
- with gold coins." One gold brick weighed more than 62 lbs. No one
- can guess how much more gold might have been brought aboard by the
- 425 passengers who died in the sinking; many were Californians
- fresh from the gold rush.
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- The salvage operation is financed by a group of Ohio investors
- who put up $7 million. Aboard the recovery ship Arctic Discover is
- a team of scientists studying the ecosystem around the sunken
- steamer. But Thompson concedes that new knowledge is merely a
- fringe benefit. Says he: "Without the gold, we would not be here."