Looters likely scouring sunken treasures off Nova Scotia, experts warn
HALIFAX — Beneath the choppy waves off Nova Scotia’s rugged coast are thousands of shipwreck sites sprinkled with lost treasure: centuries-old coins, canons, and perhaps even historic booty stolen from the White House.
Treasure salvagers who once spent millions of dollars exploring such sites say provincial laws are preventing shipwrecks from being scoured in any meaningful way — and that the region has become somewhat of a wild west for so-called pirate divers.
“Nothing would lead me to believe that these sites are safe from being looted,” said Jeff MacKinnon, a third-generation treasure hunter from Cape Breton. “It’s too enticing for some people not to look.”
Roughly 10,000 ships have found their final resting place near Nova Scotia, which was visited by early European explorers in the 16th and 17th centuries and has long been a major world shipping destination.