BEAUFORT, NC (AP).- The largest exhibit ever of artifacts from what’s believed to be the remains of Blackbeard’s flagship is opening at the North Carolina Maritime Museum, with bells, cannon, lead shot and part of the hull among the items on display. There won’t, however, be any pirate treasure, says David Moore, the museum’s nautical archaeologist. That’s because the Queen Anne’s Revenge didn’t wreck, but ran aground, giving the crew time to remove most of the valuables. “We weren’t expecting to find a chest filled with silver, gold and jewelry,” Moore said in a phone interview with The Associated Press as he readied for the exhibit, which opens Saturday at the museum in Beaufort. Instead, the treasures are weaponry and whatever high-dollar equipment the pirates couldn’t take with them. About 300 items from shipwreck in about 20 feet of water off North Carolina’s coast will be displayed at the U-shaped exhibit, wh