Community Corner

Cape Museum Finds Profitable Pirate's Bones?

Samuel "Black Sam" Bellamy is thought to be the highest-earning pirate ever.

YARMOUTH, MA. — Researchers are working to use DNA to identify whether a human bone recovered from a Cape Cod shipwreck belongs to the infamous pirate Samuel "Black Sam" Bellamy.

The Whydah Pirate Museum in Yarmouth publicly displayed the bone Monday. It was found near what's believed to be Bellamy's pistol.

The objects were pulled from the Whydah Gally shipwreck several years ago.

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The museum has enlisted forensic scientists to extract DNA and compare it with DNA from a living Bellamy descendant. Testing will take about a month.

The Whydah sank in 1717. The wreck was discovered in 1984. Most of its treasure is thought to remain on the ocean floor.

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Forbes has listed Bellamy as the highest-earning pirate ever, plundering about $120 million worth of treasure in a little over a year.

In this Wednesday, Sept. 21, 2016 photo, archaeologist Marie Kesten Zahn, of Yarmouth, Mass. displays a silver coin recovered from the wreckage of the pirate ship Whydah Gally at the Whydah Pirate Museum, in Yarmouth. The undersea explorer Barry Clifford, who discovered the Whydah Gally, the first authenticated pirate shipwreck in U.S. waters, says he’s finally found where the ship’s vaunted treasure lies after more than 30 years of poking around the murky waters off Cape Cod. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)