Rowley

Explosives buried for years in Mass. forest uncovered by metal detector, police say

Rowley police said that the explosives appeared to have been buried for so long that no further investigation was expected

TNT and plastic explosives were found buried in a remote part of a Massachusetts state forest by a man with a metal detector on Thursday, police said.

It wasn't immediately clear what the explosives were doing in the ground in Rowley, near the border with Newbury, but they appeared to have been there for years, according to Rowley police.

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A state bomb squad safely destroyed the explosives — a box of TNT and plastic explosives in a metal container — with three blasts, according to police. The FBI and U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives were also called to the scene.

Rowley police said that the explosives appeared to have been buried for so long that they don't expect to be able to determine a source. No further investigation was expected.

The area was far from homes or businesses, so no one was evacuated as the bomb squad dealt with the issue. Police didn't say what brought the man with the metal detector to the heavily forested area off Route 1. The man's identity has not been released at this time.

The area, north of Boston near the New Hampshire border, is close to the Parker River off the coast, with several wildlife preserves.

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