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Treasure Coins: Silver "Atocha" Treasure Bar with Certificate

Currency:USD Category:Everything Else / Other Start Price:NA Estimated At:14,000.00 - 25,000.00 USD
Treasure Coins: Silver  Atocha  Treasure Bar with Certificate
(c. 1622) Huge Silver Ingot or "Treasure Bar," from the Nuestra Senora De Atocha, with its authentication certificate, Choice Very Fine. This bar has a recorded weight on its certificate of 79 Troy Pounds 3.04 Troy Ounces (approximately 956 Troy Ounces) and measures 14" long x 5" wide x 3" high, being of 2,380 Carat purity (2,400 being the purest of silver). Recovered from the wreck of the famous Spanish Treasure Ship Nuestra Senora De Atocha, by Melvin Fisher and Treasure Salvors, Inc. This bar is accompanied by a copy of the original Treasure Salvors, Inc. Certificate of Authenticity bearing the printed date of September 15, 1986. The certificate shows this exact bar in a photo at upper left, along with its identifying unique markings, serial number and measurements. There are a number of original markings which are visible and described on the certificate. There is an even faint porosity to the silver from being submerged for centuries, but this bar is well above-average in overall quality. This silver ingot is being sold "as is," and based upon the documented information provided on the matching photo certificate. Many of the silver bars were mined and processed in Upper Peru (modern Bolivia). Each ingot was poured into a mold and then struck with its serial number, which would be listed in the ship's manifest. Other markings were added attesting to purity, taxes paid, the shipper, etc. On September 6, 1622, the heavily laden treasure galleon of King Philip IV's Tierra Firma Fleet sank in a raging hurricane near the Florida Keys. Two Hundred and sixty people and tons of silver, gold and other precious cargo were lost at sea and not located until July 20, 1985 by Treasure Salvors, Inc. If one travels today to Mel Fisher's company store in Key West, similar silver bars are on display as sunken treasure and typically priced between $25,000 to $35,000 each. These recovered Ingots truly are a prize for collectors, recalling the days of the Spanish conquest and the riches displaced from the New World back to the Olde. The condition is listed on the certificate as Class Factor .80 (out of 1.00), indicating that this is one of the finer quality bars found on the Atocha wreck site.