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Bones Recovered From Cape Cod Shipwreck Could Belong To Infamous Pirate

In 1984, Barry Clifford found the wreck of the pirate ship Whydah off the coast of Wellfleet. Ever since, he has been salvaging the wreck and has established the Whydah Pirate Museum, showcasing all he has retrieved from the ocean.

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By
Bill Shields
, CBS Boston
YARMOUTH, MASS. — In 1984, Barry Clifford found the wreck of the pirate ship Whydah off the coast of Wellfleet. Ever since, he has been salvaging the wreck and has established the Whydah Pirate Museum, showcasing all he has retrieved from the ocean.

Now, he may have found the remains of Captain Samuel "Black Sam" Bellamy.

"Why we believe that these remains are that of Captain Sam Bellamy is because of where the remains were found, where the bones were found," Casey Sherman, a member of the Whydah research team, told CBS Boston.

A human leg bone was found in the shipwreck near where the pirate's ship sank. Clifford believes the bone, that was removed from a massive clump of sand and iron, belongs to Bellamy because it was found near his pistol.

"Who is this lost pirate? Is it Sam Bellamy?" Clifford asked. "Is he African? Is he from Scotland, Ireland, England?"

Clifford has enlisted a team of forensic scientists that will test the DNA from the 300-year-old thigh-bone. The team has already located Bellamy's direct descendants in England.

After plundering the West Indies in 1717, Bellamy was heading to Cape Cod to visit his girlfriend, when a storm sank the ship. It was loaded with millions of dollars in loot.

Clifford said the search is "far from over" and that the "mother load is still out there under 30 feet of sand".

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