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Shipwrecks and Lost Treasures of the Seven Seas : WET & HOT NEWS !

22 December 2010

Another search for treasure on Chile's Robinson Crusoe Island

Bernama -

Always an optimist, U.S. treasure hunter Bernard Keiser is requesting permission from Chilean authorities for a fifth try at locating gold and jewels worth US$10 billion supposedly buried on Chile's Robinson Crusoe Island during the 18th century by British pirates.

Robinson Crusoe island is 400 miles west of Chile's mainland in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.

Keiser, whose treasure-seeking effort on the island the past 12 years has cost him an estimated US$2 million, is reportedly in the process of shelling out another US$100,000 for this latest effort which includes highly sophisticated mining video technology, the Santiago Times reported.

Keiser, a history and political science graduate from the University of Jacksonville, made his fortune supplying NASA with material for their space suits.

But Keiser's expenses will be well covered should he find the treasure as Chilean law will provide him 25% of any booty he discovers and Keiser estimates the treasure's value at US$10 billion.

According to legend, the treasure originated in the Incan Empire and was stolen during the Spanish conquest of Peru in the 16th and 17th centuries.

When the treasure was en route to Spain around 1715, the navigator in charge of the ship landed on Robinson Crusoe Island and buried his cargo.

Before he could return to unearth the booty, an English pirate named Cornelius Webb uncovered the Incan treasure and reburied it elsewhere on the island.

The legendary stash is reported to contain 800 barrels of gold, including precious pieces of gold and jewellery.

What became of the fortune afterwards has been the focus of speculation and myth that has survived on the island for over 300 years.

Since 1998, the U.S. millionaire Keiser has been excavating caves all over the island in search of the hidden loot but has never been able to find the "X" that marks the spot.

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