The excavation commenced on 15 August 2016 with a team of 64 people, including engineers, geologists, chemists, archaeologists and a specialist in military demolitions.
The excavation reportedly cost 116,000 euros or $131,000 and was financed by private sponsors, and with the help of volunteers.
The dig was halted after seven days when no tracks, tunnel or train were found. The radar images thought to have been the train were revealed to be natural ice formations. An official from the town admitted tourism was up 44% for the year, and said "the publicity the town has gotten in the global media is worth roughly around $200 million. Our annual budget for promotion is $380,000, so think about that. Whether the explorers find anything or not, that gold train has already arrived." The town mayor was considering naming a roundabout after Koper and Richter. The search would continue, according to Koper and Richter, in other nearby locations.
Koper and Richter 2015-2016[edit]
In late August 2015, news stories began circulating about two unidentified men who had obtained a death-bed confession about a buried gold train.
[6] The two were later identified as Piotr Koper of Poland and Andreas Richter of Germany,
[1] co-owners of the mine exploration company XYZ S.C.
[7][8] Using lawyers as an intermediary, the two men opened negotiation with the Polish government for a "finders' fee" of 10% of the value of the train in return for information leading to its location.
[6] They would reveal the exact location once the documents were signed.
[9] Koper and Richter would later claim information about their discovery was leaked by someone within the government, resulting a world-wide
media circus.
[8] "The media uproar around the 'gold train' was unleashed not by us, finders, but because of the leak of confidential documents that were filed in state offices."
[8]
On August 28, Polish Deputy Culture Minister
Piotr Żuchowski announced that
ground-penetrating radar images taken by Koper and Richter confirmed with 99% probability that a train of 100 meters in length had been found.
[6][10] However on August 31,
Tomasz Smolarz,
Governor of the
Lower Silesian Voivodeship, told reporters that "There is no more proof for this alleged discovery than for other claims made over the years," saying, "It's impossible to claim that such a find actually exists at the location indicated based on the documents that have been submitted."
[11]
On September 4, Koper and Richter went public for the first time, breaking their previous anonymity. They announced that the precise location of the train had been given to Polish authorities.
[9] In bid to assuage doubters,
[8]they also released images they had taken with a
KS-700 Ground Penetrating Radar system that appeared to show a 50-meter deep man-made shaft with something in it.
[12] Koper and Richter believed the train was buried next to a 4-kilometre (2.5-mile) stretch of track on
Polish State Railways' Wrocław–Wałbrzych line at kilometre 65.
[13][5][14]
The Polish authorities sectioned off a section of woodland in the area of kilometre 65, as well as deploying police and other guards in order to prevent access to the numerous treasure hunters who had arrived armed with detection equipment.
[14] In late September, the Polish military, acting at the request of the regional governor, began to clear the surface of trees and search for booby traps and mines.
[15] The military confirmed on October 4 that no explosives or other dangers existed, down to a meter depth.
[16]
In mid-November, two different teams were cleared by city authorities in
Wałbrzych to make a non-invasive assessment of the site.
[17] The first team cleared for work was Koper and Richter. The second team were specialists from the
Krakow Mining Academy headed by Janusz Madej. On 15 December, the second team announced that a survey had found no evidence of a train, though possible evidence of a collapsed tunnel.
[18] Koper and Richter stood by their claim of a train to which Madej responded "It's human to make a mistake, but it’s foolish to stand by it."
[19]
In May 2016, despite outside expert opinion that no train existed, Koper and Richter secured permission to begin digging at the site from the owners of the property, Polish State Railways.
[20] The excavation commenced on 15 August 2016 with a team of 64 people, including engineers, geologists, chemists, archaeologists and a specialist in military demolitions.
[21] The excavation reportedly cost 116,000 euros or $131,000 and was financed by private sponsors, and with the help of volunteers.
[22]
The dig was halted after seven days when no tracks, tunnel or train were found.
[23] The radar images thought to have been the train were revealed to be natural ice formations. An official from the town admitted tourism was up 44% for the year, and said "the publicity the town has gotten in the global media is worth roughly around $200 million. Our annual budget for promotion is $380,000, so think about that. Whether the explorers find anything or not, that gold train has already arrived." The town mayor was considering naming a roundabout after Koper and Richter. The search would continue, according to Koper and Richter, in other nearby locations.
[23]