Treasure map worth billions of dollars by NASA astronaut

During the flight into orbit, NASA astronaut Gordon Cooper is said to have drawn a Caribbean treasure map and kept it secret for over 40 years.

According to the Daily Telegraph, the task of astronaut Gordon Cooper took place only months after the Cuban missile crisis of 1963. Cooper was put on Earth orbit with long-range detection devices, which could be accurately identified. Nuclear facilities in the world.

Picture 1 of Treasure map worth billions of dollars by NASA astronaut
Gordon Cooper is said to have drawn a treasure map in the Caribbean.(Illustration).

But that's not the only thing that keeps Cooper's attention. NASA astronaut detects unusual signals in the southern Caribbean waters. The signal is not so big that it is a nuclear missile launcher, but it is most likely wrecked.

Cooper discovered more than 100 such strange signals, took pictures, recorded coordinates. NASA astronaut believes that these are sunken gold ships in Christopher Columbus's expedition.

Gordon Cooper, one of the most famous NASA astronauts of that period, spent two decades creating a treasure map , linking coordinates to each other. Cooper believes that billions of dollars are worth the treasures buried in the sea.

That map has sparked a Caribbean treasure hunt. The US Channel Discovery Channel is expected to release a documentary about treasure that Gordon Cooper discovered this week.

"It sounds crazy, but it's a treasure map from the universe," said treasure hunter Darrell Miklos, friend of astronaut Cooper.

According to Miklos, Cooper died suddenly in 2004, giving him a valuable map and related research.

Picture 2 of Treasure map worth billions of dollars by NASA astronaut
NASA astronaut Gordon Cooper (right), standing next to the late US President John F. Kennedy.

"I think that he knows how long he no longer lives, so he gave me information and said: If anything happens to me, make sure you complete this job," Miklos share on Fox News.

After retiring from NASA, Cooper won the focus on the treasure map, but had no chance to search for real treasure. For Miklos, completing this task is to appreciate the memory of the lost friend, and also to witness the treasure at the bottom of the sea.

Reply on Parade.com. Miklos said he founded a group of archaeologists and researchers to search for treasure. They choose where Cooper makes a special mark to increase their chances of success.

"Gordon marks a special place because that might be the place where the big treasure is located on the bottom of the sea. That's where we are focusing , " Miklos said.

The Miklos family once found many treasures in the sea in the past, including gold storage from shipwrecks in the 1960s and 1970s.