Showing posts with label educational sessions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label educational sessions. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 1, 2018

8/1/18 Report - Crew Members of 1740 Treasure Wreck Identified. 350 Years of History. Educational Sessions.


Written by the TreasureGuide for the exclusive use of treasurebeachesreport.blogspot.com.

Source: See BBC link below.

Crew members of a ship which sank off the Kent coast more than 275 years ago have been identified.

Researchers used archive documents to name 19 of the 237 shipmen who were on board the Dutch ship the Rooswijk.

Among them were a senior surgeon, a 19-year-old on his first voyage and a sailor who had previously survived a shipwreck.

The vessel, which was carrying coins and silver ingots, sank on Goodwin Sandsin January 1740.

More than a thousand vessels are known to have been wrecked on the notorious sandbanks, dubbed "the great ship swallower"...


Some coins had holes deliberately made in them - an indication the crew sewed them into their clothes to smuggle to the Dutch East Indies...

Here is the link for the rest of that article.

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-kent-44925445

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Source: See CBC link below.

Archeologists have unearthed more than 50,000 artifacts dating back more than three centuries on the quiet grounds of a former Catholic church, just west of Quebec City.

The site in L'Ancienne-Lorette, Que., has revealed itself to be a real treasure trove of discoveries, said lead archeologist Stéphane Noël.

"We really have close to 350 years of history on the site," said Noël, who is working as part of an archeologist workers' cooperative, GAIA, on the eight-week excavation.


And here is that link.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/archeology-dig-artifacts-quebec-city-huron-wendat-history-1.4764246

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The 24th Sedwick treasure auction will be held Nov. 2-3, 2018 at the DoubleTree Suites Hotel at Disney Springs.

The day before there will be educational presentations by Barry Clifford on the Whydah, Dr. Kris Lane on the colonial history of the Andes, mining, piracy and trade, and Emilio Ortiz, professional numismatist, researcher and author.

You can consign now.  They are interested in the following.

•          Choice and important Spanish colonial cobs from Mexico, Lima and Potosí
•          Collections of Latin American coins, particularly Costa Rica, Cuba, Mexico, Panama and Peru
•          Gold bars and artifacts from the Spanish Fleets of 1622 (Atocha and Santa Margarita) and 1715
•          US coins and world paper money

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Nothing significant in the Atlantic and no big change in beach conditions.

Happy hunting,
TreasureGuide@comcast.net

Wednesday, November 1, 2017

11/1/17 Report - Numismatic Archaeology. Literally Finding a Mint. Old Coin Blog. Educational Seminars Today.


Written by the TreasureGuide for the exclusive use of treasurebeachesreport.blogspot.com.

Source: Numismatic Archaeology of North America: A Field Guide.

Here is an interesting book - Numiamatic Archaeology of North America: A Field Guide, by Akin, Bard and Akin, 2016.

The above illustration comes from that book.  I know it is a little hard to read the illustration but it starts on the bottom with ocho reales, or an 8-reale, and ends at the top with the small medio reale and then smaller cuartillo, or quarter reale.  The number on the right is the number of coins of that denomination in one peso.

Just thought it was useful to see a good comparison of the different sizes of reals.

You can preview a little of that book online.  It contains many illustrations.  I would say well worth reading.

Click here to go to the preview.

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... “We’ve come to a layer with material from the end of the 3rd and the beginning of the 4th century in which we have discovered slag and bellows for fanning up fire for metal smelting," lead archaeologist Veselka Katsarova from the Museum of Sofia History, has told bTV.

She adds that the layer in question contains coins from the time of Roman Emperors Gallienus (Gallien) (r. 253-268 AD), Claudius II (r. 268-270 AD), and Aurelian (r. 270-275 AD) up until the beginning of the 4th century AD.

“We are finding slag, and clay fragments from bellows… There are metal particles stuck to the bellows fragments," she has elaborated, as cited by BNT.

In addition to these latest finds, the archaeologists’ hypothesis that in the Late Roman era the building in question and the adjacent structures were turned into a coin mint is also supported by findings from excavations in the 1970s and 1980s by archaeologist Prof. Magdalina Stancheva of a large Roman public building underneath today’s St. Nedelya Cathedral...


Here is the link for more about that.

http://archaeologyinbulgaria.com/2017/10/25/archaeologists-may-found-mint-ancient-roman-city-serdica-bulgarias-capital-sofia/

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Peter H. from Wales recommended this blog about old and beat up coins.

www.oldcoinnecromancer.blogspot.co.uk

Take a look.

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The educational sessions and lot viewing for the Sedwick auction takes place today (Wednesday) in Orlando.

Happy hunting,
TreasureGuide@comcast.net