Image Credit: © A Sealed Chest In A 1740 Shipwreck Is Deepening The Mystery Of A Lost Treasure Off England’s Coast. Credit: Nicolas-SB/Shutterstock.com
The first signs of the Rooswijk disaster did not come from the ship itself. In January 1740, letters and personal belongings washed ashore on the Kent coast, revealing that the Dutch East India Company vessel had sunk before reaching Jakarta. Nearly 250 passengers, soldiers, and crew members died when the ship went down on the Goodwin Sands off Kent. What remained underwater was left scattered across the seabed rather than preserved as a single intact hull.
That fragmented condition still defines the site today. Archaeologists are working across a disturbed debris field shaped by shifting sand, silt, and marine conditions. The wreck contains structural remains, cargo, domestic objects, and personal belongings from the ship’s final voyage. Those conditions have also made the excavation urgent, as exposed materials are vulnerable to both natural erosion and human interference.
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https://dailygalaxy.com/2026/03/rooswijk-shipwreck-sealed-chest-silver-bones-dutch-treasure-ship/