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Drawn in invisible ink, is this the site of Walter Raleigh's lost colony?

Clue discovered concealed in Elizabethan map of North America

Dalya Alberge
Wednesday 02 May 2012 23:22 BST
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The fate of Sir Walter Raleigh's famed "lost colony" in the New World – and the disappearance without a trace of more than 100 English settlers – has been an unsolved mystery for 400 years, a lost chapter of Anglo-American history. That so many men, women and children could simply vanish has become the stuff of American folklore. Many assume that they were either slaughtered by native American Indians or assimilated into their communities.

Now, a clue has emerged that experts hope could help solve the centuries-old mystery of the settlers' disappearance, and lead them to the site of what Raleigh and Queen Elizabeth I hoped would be a capital, the first English attempt at colonisation.

Concealed on an Elizabethan map of the east coast of North America, but now identified by the British Museum, is a hint at the colony's location drawn in what appears to be invisible ink, further disguised by a barely-discernible patch of paper glued to it.

Scientific tests have revealed that a lozenge, the symbol for a fort, was hidden on the map drawn by John White, who accompanied Raleigh's first attempts to establish a colony. White led the settlers who were to establish the "Cittie of Raleigh" of which he was intended to be governor.

Its concealment on the map reflects an age mired in political intrigue – Elizabeth I was then facing plots to place the Catholic Mary Queen of Scots on the English throne – and fears of such a map getting into the hands of court spies.

Invisible ink was concocted at that time from milk, citrus juice or urine, and usually revealed by applying heat.

An official announcement will be made today, but an excavation of the site, now farmland, is planned.

Scientific tests were conducted by the British Museum's curator, Kim Sloan, and scientist, Janet Ambers, following a request by Brent Lane, a professor at the University of North Carolina and a director of the First Colony Foundation, which conducts archaeological and historical research.

Yesterday, Mr Lane described receiving photographs showing the hidden fort: "I marvelled at it. It was as if Sir Walter Raleigh had sent me an email... saying 'This was my... capital'."

He said the search for the colony has lasted "for 400 years". The prominent location of the fort symbol suggests, Mr Lane says, that "this may have been where Raleigh decided to locate his capital".

The map, in pen, brown ink and watercolour, heightened with silver and gold, is notably accurate. White was a gentleman-artist who gave us our first precise views of the New World. His collection is in the British Museum, though his name is not widely known.

In the 1580s, he sailed on the voyage sponsored by Raleigh to set up the colony's capital. An expedition with 118 settlers landed off the north-east coast but with insufficient supplies. White was sent home to obtain assistance, but by the time supplies reached them, the colonists had disappeared without trace.

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