Cornwall, England – A routine fishing trip turned into a mystery when a local crew hauled a strange, barnacle-covered container from the seabed three miles off the coast of St. Ives.
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The object – roughly five feet long, made of dark wood with rusted iron bands – had no markings, no serial numbers, and no logical explanation.
“We almost threw it back,” said captain Thomas Grady, 47. “But it was too strange.”
After an hour of debate, the crew pried open the rusted lock. Inside, packed in black sediment, lay a collection of centuries-old artifacts: a gilded bronze hand mirror, three leather-bound books in an unknown language, a jeweled cross, and sealed parchment scrolls.
Preliminary analysis suggests the items date from the late 15th century. But the mystery is this: the container shows almost no signs of being underwater for 500 years.
“We should have left it down there,” said 68-year-old fisherman Edwin Marsh. He refused to explain why.
The artifacts have been sent to a secure lab in London. The British Museum has classified the find as a “potential anomaly.”
Captain Grady says he’s going back to fishing. “Next time, I’m cutting the net.”
