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256-year-old relic of European contact with NZ rediscovered in RNZ podcast
256-year-old relic of European contact with NZ rediscovered in RNZ podcast

RNZ News

time2 days ago

  • General
  • RNZ News

256-year-old relic of European contact with NZ rediscovered in RNZ podcast

A 256-year-old anchor described by Heritage New Zealand as "one of the oldest relics of early European contact with New Zealand" has been located after vanishing for 43 years. The anchor, lost by a French ship more than 250 years ago, had been located by the famous underwater treasure hunter Kelly Tarlton in 1982, but nobody had seen it since. Efforts to relocate the anchor have been the focus of the RNZ podcast Kelly Tarlton's Final Treasure Hunt . "I think we found… well, I don't think - I know we found the last de Surville anchor," marine engineer Brendan Wade said in a phone interview, still aboard his boat in Doubtless Bay. "It's really exciting." Brendan Wade treasure hunting. Photo: Ellie Callahan The anchor, estimated at 4.1 metres long, and weighing more than a tonne, once belonged to the French ship Saint Jean Baptiste , which arrived off the coast of Doubtless Bay in 1769 - around the same time Captain James Cook was making his first voyage to New Zealand. The ship's crew were dropping dead of scurvy, and its commander, Captain Jean-François Marie de Surville, had been forced to make landfall in Aotearoa New Zealand. The crew were nursed back to health by members of Ngāti Kahu living near the northern edge of Doubtless Bay. Relations between tangata whenua and the new arrivals were initially peaceful. However, that changed when one of the ship's small boats was lost in a storm and washed up on shore. It was claimed by local Māori as a gift from Tangaroa. De Surville retaliated to what he interpreted as theft by setting fire to a nearby kainga, and seizing two carved waka. He also kidnapped a local rangatira named Ranginui , who was taken away in chains, and subsequently died of thirst and scurvy aboard the Saint Jean Baptiste . The storm which precipitated these events also claimed three of the Saint Jean Baptiste' s large iron anchors. The ship's logs capture in harrowing detail how the ship was blown "within musket shot" of the cliffs of the Karikari Peninsula after the cable securing the ship to its anchor snapped. Two other anchors were deployed, but failed to find purchase on the sandy bottom of the bay. De Surville gave orders to cut the two remaining anchors loose in an effort to save the ship. His second in command, Guilliam Labe, recorded in his journal that "the vessel stayed for quite a long time without answering to her rudder and we stared death in the face, seeing rocks along the length of the ship fit to make your hair stand on end". Thanks to an extraordinary piece of seamanship, the vessel was saved, but the three anchors were lost. The anchor had been located by the famous underwater treasure hunter Kelly Tarlton in 1982, but nobody had seen it since. Photo: Supplied to RNZ The three anchors remained at the bottom of the ocean for more than 200 years until the first was discovered by famous marine treasure hunter (and aquarium founder) Kelly Tarlton in 1974. It was retrieved from the bottom of the ocean and now hangs above the foyer at Te Papa museum. The second anchor was found later that year by Northland diver Mike Bearsley and installed at Te Ahu Museum in Kaitaia. The third anchor was located in 1982 by a team including Kelly Tarlton, his daughter Nicole Tarlton, Vietnamese diver Hung Nguyen and Kelly's brother-in-law Peter Pettigrew. Kelly Tarlton recorded the location of the anchor, but in the 40 years since his papers were lost and despite many experienced divers looking for it, nobody had managed to relocate it. In the process of making his podcast, Kelly Tarlton's Final Treasure Hunt , host Hamish Williams explored the possibility the anchor might have been illicitly salvaged, and made the centrepiece of a music festival at Te Arai called "Shipwrecked". However a later expedition to Doubtless Bay with marine engineer Brendan Wade, two of Kelly's former treasure hunting companions, Keith Gordon and Dave Moran, as well as local diver Whetu Rutene (Ngāti Kahu) suggested the anchor was still at the bottom of the ocean. The team used a magnetometer to search the bay, and detected a large magnetic anomaly on the seabed. However, underwater searches of the location were unsuccessful, raising the possibility that the anchor may have been buried by sediment, or that the equipment was defective. Then, just days before the final episode of the podcast was released, there was a new development. Hamish and Fiona Tarlton with flowers for Kelly in December 2020. Photo: Hamilton Williams Kelly Tarlton had filed the detailed notes of his discovery of the anchor at his Museum of Shipwrecks, and these files were later sold at auction when the museum closed in the early 2000s. Auction records suggested the files had been sold to Kelly's brother in-law Peter Pettigrew, but Pettigrew had no recollection of purchasing them, and insisted the records must be mistaken. However, just days before the podcast was launched, Pettigrew discovered the file buried at the back of a storage unit. "[It was] the very last carton at the very back of the lock up on the ground level, the lowest rung of all was 'item 65, Kelly's Archives'," Pettigrew explained. But finding the notes turned out to be just the first step. Marine engineer Brendan Wade, partner to Ellie Callahan - one of the podcasts producers - had become heavily involved in the search for the anchor, lending both his expertise and his equipment, including his boat, a remotely operated underwater vehicle, and a sophisticated sonar-scanning array to the endeavour. Wade recalled the moment he received the email with Kelly's long-lost notes. "I thought 'f***ing eureka we've got it!'" But that enthusiasm was short-lived. It turned out that Kelly's notes did not include precise coordinates. Instead they had drawings and readings taken using a sextant, an old-fashioned navigational tool used to estimate the location of a ship at sea by referencing landmarks on shore against the position of the sun. Converting sextant readings into GPS coordinates is not a simple task. Luckily, Wade was at sea working on a survey ship at the time and was able to lean on the expertise of his colleagues. "There's a bit of clever maths involved to do this, but the boys very graciously taught me," he explained. To Wade's surprise, the coordinates he calculated didn't match the location of the magnetometer signal found in the previous expedition. He was initially sceptical that Kelly Tarlton had accurately recorded his position "I actually kinda thought I just want[ed] to go up and disprove this, because it doesn't match anything else. We've got this [magnetometer signal], that's where the anchor is." Brendan Wade with the second de Surville anchor at Te Ahu Museum in Kaitaia. Photo: Ellie Callahan Braving wild weather which brought severe flooding to parts of the country last week, Wade motored out to the coordinates with his ROV - invoking the spirit of Kelly Tarlton along the way. "I had a chat to Kelly on the way out there and said 'come on mate, you've to to help me out here!'" Wade remembered. After several attempts were foiled by heavy swell, Wade finally managed to get his ROV into the water, and was astonished by what he found. "Out of the gloom was this massive ring, and you kind of look at it and you think, oh, maybe that, Could that be natural? No, it's not natural … it turned out to be the ring on the shank of the anchor. And then as I saw further down, you could start seeing the shank of the anchor laying down on the seabed, and then out of the gloom in this massive fluke, just sticking vertically up." Wade says the anchor is sitting at a depth of approximately 28 meters, and one of its flukes is jammed so firmly in the seabed that the main shaft of the anchor is actually suspended horizontally just above the seafloor. The anchor is encrusted with marine life including large sponges, and appears to be home to a single Leatherjacket, which Wade's two children have dubbed "the guardian fish". Heritage New Zealand's has confirmed the authenticity of Wade's find saying in a statement: "By the description of the location and its physical shape and scale it is almost certainly the third anchor associated with de Surville and his ship the St Jean Baptiste . As such, the anchor is one of the oldest relics of early European contact with New Zealand." Heritage New Zealand have recommended the site remain undisturbed until tangata whenua have been consulted, and the area can be assessed by a professional archaeologist. As for what the late Kelly Tarlton would have made of the rediscovery of his anchor 43 years later, his daughter Fiona laughed and said he would have said "it bloody took you long enough!".

Kelly Tarlton's final treasure hunt
Kelly Tarlton's final treasure hunt

RNZ News

time27-06-2025

  • General
  • RNZ News

Kelly Tarlton's final treasure hunt

Hamish Williams and the sextant. Photo: Hamilton Williams "It'll be there. Absolutely" insisted veteran treasure hunter John Dearling. "You can't get it out of the reef without wrecking it … It's basically welded into that", agreed his fellow treasure hunter, Peter Pettigrew. But as Hamish Williams was standing in front of a 4.5-meter-tall iron anchor, listening to the thumping of a concert speaker, he was having his doubts. For the past year, Hamish and an intrepid group of allies had been trying to complete an unfinished adventure: Relocating the third anchor of the Saint Jean Baptiste, the oldest European artifact left in New Zealand. The Anchor had last been seen at the bottom of Doubtless Bay in 1982 by underwater treasure hunter (and aquarium founder) Kelly Tarlton. But while everyone insisted the Anchor must still be beneath the sea, nobody had seen it in 43 years. Now, Hamish was seeing an object which exactly matched the description of that historical relic. Far from the bottom of the ocean, it was standing high and dry amid gyrating party-goers at a music festival halfway between Warkworth and Mangawhai. Efforts to finish an adventure 250 years in the making had taken yet another bizarre twist. Tiger Tukariri. Photo: Hamilton Williams The story of the Saint Jean Baptiste is as tragic as it is dramatic. The name of the ship's captain, Jean-François Marie De Surville, draws a bitter chuckle from Tiger Tukariri. His Ngāti Kahu ancestors were among those who first greeted the Frenchman on his arrival over 250 years ago. "That punk" Tiger says of De Surville. "That punk who stole our tupuna." Captain De Surville had landed in Doubtless Bay out of desperation. He'd never intended to sail for these shores, but with his crew dropping dead of scurvy, De Surville was forced to make for New Zealand where his men were nursed back to health by Tangata Whenua, including a local chief named Ranginui. "He took them in, and brought them back to good health," Tiger says. First contact with Ngāti Kahu was peaceful. The sailors were welcomed ashore with the first documented example of a Pōwhiri, and given permission to restock on supplies of water and firewood. But on 27 December 1769, it all went wrong. A huge storm nearly wrecked the Saint Jean Baptiste against the rugged cliffs of the Karikari Peninsula. As the ship's bosun, Guilliam Labe recorded the near miss in his journal: "The sea was breaking over us and driving us onto the coast. To make matters worse, the vessels stayed for quite a long time without answering to her rudder, and we stared death in the face, seeing rocks along the length of the ship fit to make your hair stand on end." Against the odds, the ship was saved, but in the process, three of its enormous iron anchors - each measuring more than 4 meters tall and weighing a tonne and a half - were lost. In the aftermath of the storm, the peaceful relationship between Ngāti Kahu and the French sailors was fractured. Brendan Wade treasure hunting. Photo: Ellie Callaghan One of the ship's small boats had broken loose and washed ashore. It was claimed by members of the Iwi - who understood it to be a gift from Tangaroa. The French interpreted this as theft, and retaliated by burning huts and fishing nets. They then seized two carved waka, and kidnapped a local rangatira. This chief, named Ranginui, had given shelter and food to French sailors stranded on shore by the storm just a day earlier. The Saint Jean Baptiste sailed away, but neither Ranginui nor De Surville would survive the voyage to South America. Ranginui died suffering from scurvy and lack of water. De Surville drowned after the ship's small boat capsized in heavy surf off the coast of Peru. For centuries, the anchors sat undisturbed at the bottom of Doubtless Bay. Forgotten, silent relics of one of the earliest encounters between Europe and Aotearoa. That was, until a man called Kelly Tarlton came along. Hamish Williams with the second De Surville anchor at Te Papa Musuem. Photo: Hamilton Williams In the 1970s, Kelly Tarlton was world-famous in New Zealand as an underwater treasure hunter. Kelly exhaustively researched over a thousand shipwrecks around the coast of Aotearoa, and explored hundreds of them. Together with his wife Rosemary, he founded the Kelly Tarlton Museum of Shipwrecks - housed on a converted sugar freighter named the Tui, which was parked near the Treaty grounds at Waitangi. Over time, the museum was filled with treasures Kelly discovered - including the gold of the Elingamite, wrecked near the Three Kings Islands in 1902, and the Rothschild jewels from the Tasmania, which went down in 1897 off Māhia Peninsula. Sadly, after Kelly's death, all this treasure was stolen, and the Tui itself was destroyed by fire in 2025. But through the 1970s, the Shipwreck Museum generated enough cash for Kelly to fund his undersea adventures. To supplement that income, Kelly eventually decided to diversify his enterprise by building the famous aquarium in Auckland, which still bears his name. Newspapers and magazines were full of accounts of Kelly's daring expeditions - like his gruelling voyage to to the subantarctic Auckland Islands in a fruitless search for the gold of the General Grant, and his efforts at locating the notorious Lutine, which had claimed the lives of many divers in the years since it sank off the coast of the Netherlands in 1799. Then, of course, there was Kelly's discovery of the first anchor of the Saint Jean Baptiste in 1974. Anyone who has visited Te Papa museum in Wellington has undoubtedly seen this anchor. It's now mounted in the foyer, where it looms over visitors, - creased and crevassed like old dry wood thanks to two centuries of underwater corrosion. The second anchor was discovered by Northland diver Mike Bearsley, and donated to Te Ahu Museum in Kaitaia. Brendan Wade with the second De Surville anchor at Te Ahu Museum in Kaitaia. Photo: Ellie Callaghan Kelly Tarlton located the third anchor, and had plans to recover it. But tragically, in 1985, he died in his sleep, having just shaken the hand of the 100-thousandth customer at his then brand-new aquarium the day prior. Kelly's death at just 47 years old was a tragedy, most especially for his wife Rosemary and teenage daughters Nicole and Fiona, but also for the crew of treasure hunters he'd forged around him. People like Dave Moran, had become deeply attached to Kelly both through his treasure hunts, and his efforts to build the aquarium. "Kelly had it all worked out," Dave remembers. "We were going to just go wreck hunting for the rest of our lives. And then the guy that put the magic together and told the team together was gone, and no one's really replaced him." Hamish and Fiona Tarlton with flowers for Kelly in December 2020. Photo: Hamilton Williams Broadcaster Hamish Williams first heard this story from Kelly's youngest daughter, Fiona Tarlton, sitting on the back of his yacht as they sailed past the Poor Knights Islands. Fiona had agreed to crew for Hamish for a trip up north, but before they departed, Hamish was surprised to be passed a bouquet of flowers by Fiona's mother, Rosemary Tarlton. Rosemary explained the flowers were to be thrown overboard at the Poor Knights Islands, where Kelly's ashes were scattered. A few days later, as they tossed the flowers into the water, Hamish was entertained and impressed by Fiona's stories of her adventurous father. But he was equally enthralled by the idea of an incomplete adventure. An anchor left sitting at the bottom of the ocean - unseen in 40 years. Hamish pitched the idea of completing the hunt to rediscover the third anchor, and secured RNZ's support to make a podcast about the endeavour. But with no experience as a treasure hunter, he knew he'd need some help. Hamish enlisted the advice and support of Kelly's old treasure hunting companions - a fascinating and accomplished set of characters, many of whom have gone on to successful careers in the maritime world. Peter Pettigrew - Kelly's brother-in-law, who had been with him when he found the third anchor, insisted the key is a sextant, the tool De Surville himself had used to chart his position in Doubtless Bay back in 1769. Peter insisted the reason nobody has found the anchor since Kelly is because they don't use the device. "They don't take a sextant and they don't take, you know, the sextant readings from the journal and do what Kelly did, and you plot exactly where he says he was. And if you do that, that's where the anchor is." As Peter explained, Kelly had used the sextant to reverse engineer De Surville's old maps, adjusted them for the movement of the magnetic pole over the past two centuries, then searched the area using a device known as a magnetometer - which can detect iron deep beneath the water. Diving down on a signal from the magnetometer, Peter says they found the anchor almost immediately. "Nearly speared me up the bum," Peter laughed. Kelly had carefully noted the location of the anchor, but over the past 4 decades, the coordinates had seemingly been lost, and nobody had seen the anchor since. Kelly Wither and Brendan Wade look over maps. Photo: Ellie Callaghan In the process of working on his podcast, Hamish found an unexpected ally via his researcher and producer, Ellie Callahan. Ellie's partner, Brendan Wade, a marine engineer, became enthralled by the idea of finding the anchor. Brendan on his own initiative and cost installed an elaborate side scanning sonar-array on his boat, and on the very first day on the water in Doubtless Bay, they had found something. He pointed at an image from his sonar array. "There's this massive black shadow in the shape of the [anchor's] fluke," Brendan explained. "I'm not saying that that is an anchor. But what I'm saying is that if it isn't an anchor, I haven't got a … Scooby Doo of a clue of what it is." Brendan Wade pointing out at an image from his sonar array. Photo: Hamilton Williams Brendan sent his ROV down to investigate - along with a scuba diver friend named Kelly Withers - ironically, a former employee of Kelly Tarlton's aquarium. After days of diving on the spot identified by his sonar scan, Brendan thinks they have an answer. It's not the one they were hoping for. "It might not be an anchor," he admits. "If it looks like an anchor and it feels like an anchor, it doesn't always necessarily mean that it's an anchor. And in this case, we're pretty confident that it's just a rock that's shaped like an anchor." Discouraged, the team returned home. But, while scrolling through instagram, Kelly Withers saw something which made him jolt in his seat: An advertisement for a nautical-themed music festival called "Shipwrecked". Centre-stage was an enormous iron anchor - just like the one the team were looking for. Hamish Williams at the Shipwrecked festival. Photo: Hamilton Williams Hamish rapidly organised a ticket to attend the Shipwrecked festival and see the anchor in person. He drew some strange looks from other festival-goers as he walked up to the anchor in the middle of the dance floor and whipped out a tape measure. To Hamish's astonishment, the dimensions exactly matched what Kelly had recorded for the third anchor. But the early excitement was quenched by conversations with museum curators and metal experts. It turned out the measurements alone weren't enough to determine the identity of the anchor, nor would a chemical analysis of the metal it was made from. Basically, all anchors of the Saint Jean Baptiste's vintage were of a similar size and composition. Dave Moran, Brendan Wade and Keith Gordan pour over maps. Photo: Hamilton Williams The anchor's owner, Eric Morrow, explained that he had purchased the anchor in the 1990s and had no idea where it came from originally "I found in a scrapyard" Morrow explains. "It was Pacific Metals in those days, and they didn't know what to do with it. They were going to melt down, though. And I just happened to be there that day. So I offered them double scrap price for it." Morrow had heard many theories about his anchor over the years, including that it was the third anchor of the Saint Jean Baptiste. It seemed a strong possibility, especially with multiple searches of Doubtless Bay coming up empty. Hamish brought the Tarlton family to take a look at Morrow's anchor, as well as two of Kelly's former treasure- hunting companions: Dave Moran and Keith Gordon, head of the New Zealand Underwater Heritage Group. Dave walked up to inspect the anchor more closely. Damage to one of its flukes had caught his eye. "This here is really rough. I mean, one thing of that Kelly things said was that it had a fluke sticking into the reef." Kelly Tarlton's old photos of the anchor show it with one fluke deeply embedded in a rocky reef. The marks Dave Moran is pointing to might be a sign of that. Dave also notes the anchor has a significant bend in it. "I've never seen one of those anchors bent like that," he says. "That would have taken tonnes, you know, to bend it." David Moran theorises the bend might have been caused either by the enormous mass of the Saint Jean Baptiste pulling on the anchor's cable - or maybe been damaged when it was recovered from the ocean floor. But Keith Gordon was more skeptical. Together he and Dave decided it was worth one more trip to Doubtless Bay - just to eliminate any possibility the anchor might still be down there. "We want to go up and have another crack at it," Dave said. The hunt continues Hamish, Fiona, Brendan, Dave and Keith - as well as local Doubtless Bay diver Whetu Rutene - made their way out to the coordinates they'd determined most likely for the anchor. This time they had a new weapon: Keith's magnetometer - a more modern version of the tool Kelly Tarlton had used to find the anchor four decades earlier. Hamish was 90 percent convinced at this stage that the anchor at the Shipwrecked festival was, in fact, the third anchor. But he was happy to spend a day out on the water with Kelly's friends and family. However, it turned out this treasure hunt had a final twist. A loud beep came from the magnetometer, and a spike flicked across the screen. "Oooo we've already got a big hit!" exclaimed Keith Gordon. The first reading on the magnetometer. Photo: Hamilton Williams Scanning the same spot repeatedly, the magnetometer continued to detect a large anomaly on the sea floor - exactly what you'd expect for a 4.5 meter long anchor. The second reading on the magnetometer. Photo: Hamilton Williams Dave Moran, 82, didn't need any more excuses. Flipping backwards into water, his air regulator gripped between his teeth, he descended 30 meters to the bottom. After a few tense minutes, the octogenarian scuba diver resurfaced. "I didn't see anything" he yelled across to a disappointed crew. The next day, Dave and Whetu made two more dives on the same spot. Both turn up nothing. "It won't give up it's soul easy," Dave remarked to Whetu. Dave Moran about to dive into Doubtless Bay. Photo: Hamilton Williams But the treasure hunters aren't discouraged. They're already planning their next expedition with more advanced diving gear, hoping to catch a glimpse of the anchor they are convinced remains at the bottom of Doubtless Bay. "It's been a big adventure" grins Keith Gordon, "and it keeps us old people young". So how does this adventure end? Is this magnetometer signal truly the third De Surville anchor? If so, where did the anchor at the Shipwrecked festival come from? For now, these questions remain unanswered, and the hunt continues… To hear the full dramatic story of Kelly Tarlton's final treasure hunt , be sure to follow and listen on your favourite podcasting app.

Kelly Tarlton: NZ's great treasure hunter
Kelly Tarlton: NZ's great treasure hunter

RNZ News

time26-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • RNZ News

Kelly Tarlton: NZ's great treasure hunter

When you hear the name Kelly Tarlton, you probably picture the famous aquarium in Auckland - with its glass tunnels and circling sharks. But he was also New Zealand's most successful treasure hunter. Kelly Tarlton recovered millions in sunken gold, silver and jewels. He pioneered new methods of underwater excavation, and was on the brink of a brand new adventure when he died suddenly, just months after his aquarium opened - leaving behind one final, unfinished quest. In his new RNZ podcast, Kelly Tarlton's Final Treasure Hunt, journalist and storyteller Hamish Williams set out to complete that quest - to find a lost anchor dropped 250 years ago by one of the first European ships to reach Aotearoa. Along the way, Hamish uncovers an incredible story of obsession, risk, innovation, and the cost of chasing a dream. Hamish Williams talks to Kathryn about the astonishing story of Kelly Tarlton, and what he hopes to find at the bottom of Northland's Doubtless Bay. Tags: To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.

Introducing: Kelly Tarlton's Final Treasure Hunt
Introducing: Kelly Tarlton's Final Treasure Hunt

RNZ News

time09-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • RNZ News

Introducing: Kelly Tarlton's Final Treasure Hunt

Kelly Tarlton is widely known as the visionary of Kelly Tarlton's Underwater World . He was also a highly successful treasure hunter of multiple ship wrecks across the world. 40 years after his untimely death a team made up of friends, family and marine enthusiasts embark upon an adventure to complete one of his final expeditions, the location of the oldest European artifact in New Zealand - the third anchor of the St Jean Baptiste. From the bottom of Doubtless Bay, to the display walls of Te Papa, the quest to complete Kelly Tarlton's Final Treasure Hunt is on. To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use. Podcast (MP3) Oggcast (Vorbis)

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