If your childhood dream job was archaeologist, marine biologist, or pirate — we’re about to make your day.
Deep-sea exploration experts say it’s a great time to go looking for shipwrecks, per The New York Times.
And technology is playing a big role in treasure-hunting’s heyday:
But there’s another unfortunate reason that shipwreck discoveries have become more common: climate change. Rising sea levels, eroding shorelines, and powerful storms are increasingly washing shipwrecks ashore.
More shipwrecks are also being discovered because, well, more people are looking for them — or stumbling upon them.
Private companies and research groups are exploring the ocean floor to map the world’s seabed while others are surveying for oil and gas leases, pipelines, and cables.
Some big names in tech and business have set their sights on the ocean floor:
And then, of course, there are those who are not experts but tempted by the pull of extreme tourism — which sometimes ends in tragedy, like the OceanGate sub.
Before you go diving for gold, know that finding shipwrecks has become more about studying history and less about stealing buried treasure. Those who do find riches often end up in legal disputes with nations, rarely winning.
England, for example, is taking no chances with its treasure: It’s testing out new forensic marking technology to protect 57 of its shipwrecks from thieves.