Plate Fleet Shipwrecks
  - History:
    - Plate Fleets
    - Fleet of 1733
  - Create your
own adventure
  - Shipwrecks
  - Research expedition
  - Meet the team
Florida Keys National
Marine Sanctuary
  - About
  - Map
  - Preserving our
underwater history
  - Why are all
the cannons and
anchors falling apart?

Shipwrecks, like other historical and archaeological sites, are non-renewable resources. Although ships continue to sink, there will never be another wrecked Spanish galleon. Historic shipwrecks that exist today are all we will ever have. They represent limited and unique opportunities to learn about the people who built them and lived, sailed, and wrecked on them. All shipwrecks in Florida waters are protected under the Florida Historical Resources Act. This law protects all archaeological sites on state-owned or controlled lands and submerged bottomlands from unauthorized disturbance, excavation, or removal of artifacts. The wrecks of the 1733 Plate Fleet and other shipwrecks located within the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary also are protected by federal law, just as natural resources are protected, so that future generations may visit, learn from, and enjoy these unique examples of our maritime heritage.

Visitors to Infante inspect the ship’s partially exposed lower hull

 
   
Site Map Contact Us Credits
Bureau of Archaeological Research Division of Historical Resources
1733 Spanish Galleon Trial Explore the Spanish Plate Fleet disaster of 1733 Florida Department of State Preserving Our Underwater History