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  2. Lost Ship of the Desert - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lost_Ship_of_the_Desert

    The earliest tales of a lost Spanish galleon appeared shortly after the Colorado River flood of 1862. Colonel Albert S. Evans reported seeing such a ship in 1863. In the Los Angeles Daily News of August 1870, the ship was described as a half-buried hulk in a drying alkali marsh or saline lake, west of Dos Palmas, California, and 40 miles north of Yuma, Arizona.

  3. Nuestra Señora de Atocha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuestra_Señora_de_Atocha

    It was a heavily armed Spanish galleon that served as the almirante (rear guard) for the Spanish fleet. It would trail behind the other ships in the flotilla to prevent an attack from the rear. Much of the wreck of Nuestra Señora de Atocha was famously recovered by an American commercial treasure hunting expedition in 1985.

  4. Spanish treasure fleet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_treasure_fleet

    The Spanish treasure fleet, or West Indies Fleet (Spanish: Flota de Indias, also called silver fleet or plate fleet; from the Spanish: plata meaning "silver"), was a convoy system of sea routes organized by the Spanish Empire from 1566 to 1790, which linked Spain with its territories in the Americas across the Atlantic.

  5. New artifacts found in legendary treasure-laden shipwreck - AOL

    www.aol.com/artifacts-found-legendary-treasure...

    New artifacts have been found on the legendary Spanish galleon San Jose, Colombia's government announced Thursday, after the first robotic exploration of the three-century-old shipwreck.. Dubbed ...

  6. Mel Fisher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mel_Fisher

    Fisher found the Spanish galleon Nuestra Señora de Atocha [8] named after a parish in Madrid for protection. [9] He discovered silver bars from the wreck in 1973, and in 1975, Dirk found five bronze cannons whose markings would prove to be that of the Atocha. Only days later, Dirk, Angel, and Rick Gage, were killed.

  7. List of galleons of Spain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_galleons_of_Spain

    This is a list of a few of the carracks and galleons that served under the Spanish Crowns in the period 1410-1639; note that Castile and Aragon were separate nations, brought together in 1474 only through a unified Trastamaran and subsequently Habsburg monarchy, but each retaining its own governments and naval forces until the 18th century.

  8. Battle of Cabañas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Cabañas

    Jol advanced with 17 galleons in two parallel formations while Ibarra ordered to form a defensive line. Jol's 54-gun flagship, along with two other Dutch ships, attacked Ibarra's similarly 54-gun galleon San Mateo, but Ibarra ordered not to fire until the enemy ships were the closest possible, the tactic called fuego a la española ("Spanish Fire"). [2]

  9. San Miguel (1551 shipwreck) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Miguel_(1551_shipwreck)

    A fleet of nine ships left San Juan de Ulúa, Mexico, on March 15, 1551.By April 29, the San Miguel had wrecked off the north coast of Santo Domingo, with no lives lost. . Some of the registered treasure appears to have been salvaged in the following months and was sent to Sp