For your reading pleasure

Au_Dreamers

Hero Member
Dec 15, 2010
988
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back on the 1715!!
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-1-4899-0084-5_11

[h=3]Selected Bibliography[/h]
  • Lyon, E., n.d., 1622 Fleet Loss Narrative. Ms..Google Scholar


  • Lyon, E., n.d., List of Gear and Equipment and Some Construction Details of Nuestra Senora de Atocha 1622. Ms.Google Scholar


  • Lyon, E., 1975, Data on the Identification of Shipwreck Site 8M0141 in the Marquesas Keys, Florida. Ms.Google Scholar


  • Lyon, E., 1976, The Identification of a 17th-Century Spanish Galleon Nuestra Senora de Atocha. Paper presented at the St. Augustine Historical Society.Google Scholar


  • Lyon, E., 1977, Spanish Cultures in Colonial Florida and Their Connection with Historic Shipwrecks. Paper presented at the Conference on Florida Historic Shipwreck Archaeology.Google Scholar


  • Lyon, E., 1980, A Historian’s Thoughts on Some Shipwreck Models. Paper presented at the conference on Maritime Cultural Heritage of the Florida Keys: How Can It Be Preserved? Florida Endowment for the Humanities, Key West.Google Scholar


  • Lyon, E., and Mathewson, R.D., III, 1975, The Historical and Archaeological Meaning of the 1622 Shipwrecks Off the Marquesas Keys, Florida. Paper presented at the Florida Historical Society Conference, Gainesville.Google Scholar


  • Lyon, E., and Mathewson, R.D., III, 1975, An Introduction to the Ethnohistory of the Lower Florida Keys. Paper presented at the American Society for Ethnohistory Conference, Gainesville, Florida.Google Scholar


  • Lyon, E., and Purdy, B., 1982, Contraband in Spanish Colonial Ships. Itinerario: Journal of the Institute of European Expansion. University of Leiden.Google Scholar


  • Mathewson, R.D., III, 1975, Historical Shipwreck Archaeology: New Developments from the Lower Florida Keys. The Conference on Historic Site Archaeology Papers, 1973, 8:121–128.Google Scholar

    http://scholarcommons.sc.edu/cgi/vi...earch="Duncan Mathewson archeological papers"


  • Mathewson, R.D., III, 1975, A New Methodological Approach to Shipwreck Archaeology. Paper presented at the Society for Historical Archaeology and International Conference on Underwater Archaeology, Charleston, South Carolina.Google Scholar


  • Mathewson, R.D., III. 1975, Historical Shipwreck Ceramics: A Preliminary Analysis of Olive Jar Data from the Wreck Site of Nuestra Senora de Atocha (ms.), Department of Anthropology, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton.Google Scholar


  • Mathewson, R.D., III, 1975, Archaeological Recovery: Its Potential and Limitations on New World Shallow Water Sites (ms.).Google Scholar


  • Mathewson, R.D., III, 1976, Introductory Notes on Operationalizing a Procedural Model for the Conservation of Archaeological Data from the Wreck Site of Nuestra Senora de Atocha (ms.).Google Scholar


  • Mathewson, R.D., III, 1976, An Introduction to the Numismatic Assemblage from the Nuestra Senora de Atocha (ms.).Google Scholar


  • Mathewson, R.D., III, 1977, Archaeological Research on the Wreck Site of the Nuestra Senora de Atocha: A General Overview of the Mapping and Survey Procedures. Paper presented at the Society for Historical Archaeology and International Conference on Underwater Archaeology, Ottawa, Canada.Google Scholar


  • Mathewson, R.D., III, 1977, An Introduction to the Use of Aerial Photographic Imagery for Locating and Interpreting Shallow Water Shipwreck Sites Off the Florida Coast (ms.). Department of Geography, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton.Google Scholar


  • Mathewson, R.D., III, and Clyne, P., 1977, Digging Procedures Utilized in the Search for the Lower Hull Section of the Nuestra Senora de Atocha. Paper presented at the Society for Historical Archaeology and International Conference on Underwater Archaeology, Ottawa, Canada.Google Scholar


  • Mathewson, R.D., III, Dorwing, J.T., Sinclair, J.J., and Marken, M.W., 1986, Atocha Archaeology: A Look at the Anatomy of a Spanish Treasure Galleon. Paper presented at the Society for Historical Archaeology and Conferences on Underwater Archaeology: Sacramento, California.Google Scholar


  • Mathewson, R.D., III, and Lyon, E., 1976, The Guns of the Nuestra Senora de Atocha (ms.).Google Scholar


  • Mathewson, R.D., III, Lyon, E., and McAlister, R.F., 1976, Atocha Data Evaluation Report (ms.).Google Scholar


  • Mathewson, R.D., III, Murphy, L., and Spencer, B., 1975, New Concepts in Marine Archaeology: Shallow Water Historic Archaeology in the Lower Florida keys. Conference on Historic Site Archaeology Papers, 9:141–151.Google Scholar

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WOW! Talk about scientific papers, this list blows my mind! Thanks for posting this Chris and blow this up your tootie seekerGH!
 

Hey folks if you want to see corey malcom in action check out corey malcom youtube (the archeology of a 16th century ship wreck) then youll have an idea of what he does too. You will see the verso gun im talking about too. Most of this stuff is at the mel fisher muesum where he is preserving it in the lab upstairs.
 

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Mathewson explains in the book that he has been systematically blackballed by virtually the entire archaeological community since his decision to work with Treasure Salvors.

They refuse him entrance to conferences. They refuse to publish his papers despite the obvious excellence of those papers.

The archaeological community is actively suppressing the exchange of scientific knowledge because of conflict with their ideological dogma.

I have said this before and it sounds like hyperbole, but it is not: the archaeological community cares more about protecting their positions than they care about knowledge and science...

And what is their reason for refusal to work with private Salvors?

They claim the association would be in conflict with the dissemination of knowledge.

Kettle, meet Pot.:tongue3:
 

Hey folks if you want to see corey malcom in action check out corey malcom youtube (the archeology of a 16th century spanish ship wreck) then youll have an idea of what he does too. You will see the verso gun im talking about too. Most of this stuff is at the mel fisher muesum where he is preserving it in the lab upstairs.

I posted the series of videos on this forum a couple of years ago...I think the title of the thread is "archaeology of a 16th century shipwreck". In any event, great stuff.
 

Mathewson explains in the book that he has been systematically blackballed by virtually the entire archaeological community since his decision to work with Treasure Salvors.

They refuse him entrance to conferences. They refuse to publish his papers despite the obvious excellence of those papers.

The archaeological community is actively suppressing the exchange of scientific knowledge because of conflict with their ideological dogma.

I have said this before and it sounds like hyperbole, but it is not: the archaeological community cares more about protecting their positions than they care about knowledge and science...

And what is their reason for refusal to work with private Salvors?

They claim the association would be in conflict with the dissemination of knowledge.

Kettle, meet Pot.:tongue3:

Who is it that is actually guarding the cheese....?
 

So if the "public sector" is so private and the "private sector" is so public what does that say?

I would like to add that there are also private sector papers not readily available to the general public, but submitted to peers.
Hmmm wonder why they haven't been made public? :icon_scratch:

In addition two of the largest works of recorded archeological shipwreck artifact recovery in a scope of beyond what any archeologist has ever done was developed and continually used and improved upon by the private sector, namely the Fisher family.


**pipe, smoke**:occasion18:
 

SeekerGH
Are you busy reading and self educating yourself?
 

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