The ROVs would also be better able to avoid smashing any of the small snails. I think bringing in the robots eliminates that unnecessary variable.” “It makes it that much easier for them to interpret that in their mind or to see something. “The property has such a rich legacy as far as the stories and hearsay goes, that I think anybody at this point that knows of it and is certified to put on the scuba gear and go down there, they’re already going to have that preconceived notion that people have seen something down there,” he said. The ROVs are well-situated to high water pressure and immune to human fears of the supernatural that have impaired scuba divers in the past, Wiest said. Now, the production team is raising funds to send remote operated vehicles, particularly submarines carrying lights and cameras, into the cave. “We’ve actually read several books on Montezuma and Cortez and the conquering of Central America and the wars that were fought there and the reasoning for the gold to be gathered and taken and hidden. “We think more importantly than finding if there’s in fact treasure there, it’s knowing why it’s there, who put it there, who it was being hidden from and who was it intended for,” Wiest said. Nothing is too far fetched at this point only because, at this point, we can’t afford to discredit anything. He didn’t learn more until a few years ago, when his friends told him about Three Lakes’ history. Wiest has been interested in the property since he was 12 years old and his father mentioned the pond was haunted. “It’s so close, yet no one’s gotten there and no one’s ever documented it.” We’re only talking 140 feet away from shore,” Wiest said. The pond is surrounded by mystery, which is what Jubal Productions hopes to uncover. "It doesn't look like anyone will get the gold." "I can't do anything to my own property that might disturb those snails," Child told Deseret News at the time. The small creature is so rare, its only known habitat is Three Lakes pond, and each one killed can incur a $50,000 fine. Fish and Wildlife Service put the amber snail on the endangered species list in 1992. His plans were halted, however, when the U.S. Multiple efforts to dive into the caves were ended after divers said they became disoriented and saw the ghosts of Aztec guardians, but they were able to detect metal at the end of the tunnel.Ĭhild’s next move was to drain the pond. He said he knew the clues in Johnson Canyon were decoys, and the real treasure lay in a water trap 36 feet below the pond’s waterline, indicated a symbol on the cliff above the cave. In 1989, Brandt Child, a Kanab resident, bought the pond and surrounding area. It wasn’t until the 1920s, when he found a series of sealed tunnels in nearby Johnson’s Canyon that people started believing him and joining his unsuccessful hunt for the gold. While it sounds far-fetched, the story has circulated throughout Southern Utah since 1914, when Freddy Crystal showed up with a map he claimed showed the treasure’s location. Once dug, they could divert a river to the pond, fill it up and walk away from an ordinary looking pond with a valuable secret. ![]() Though some details vary, locals believe Aztecs dug the Three Lakes pond to cover the treasure’s cavernous hiding place in a water trap on the west side of the pond. 89 is the site of Montezuma’s lost treasure that could be worth more than $3 billion, according to local legend. Producer Mike Wiest along with landowner Lon Child and a crew of filmmakers are setting out to tell the story of Three Lakes, Montezuma and the treasure hunters whose attempts of recovering the gold have been foiled. Now, filmmakers hope to discover just what is there. KANAB, Kane County – For 100 years, locals have believed Montezuma’s treasure lies at the end of a tunnel below Three Lakes pond in Kanab, Utah. ![]() Reading or replaying the story in itsĪrchived form does not constitute a republication of the story. Only for your personal, non-commercial use.
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