Showing posts with label discoveries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label discoveries. Show all posts

Sunday, April 19, 2020

4/19/20 Report - Top Discoeries of The 2010s. Mysterious Clay Head. Things To Do While Waiting.


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

Source: See TheGuardian.com link below.


TheGuardian.com lists the ten most significant discoveries of the 2010s as determine by the Historic Buildings and Monuments Commission for England.   The discovering include the following.

Where Richard III was laid to rest.  He was under a car park in Leicester.

What food the Bronze Age population of Fens ate.

Steps taken by villagers to prevent corpses from rising from the dead.

The discovery of a Bronze Age settlement in Cambridgehire.

The discovery of the Elizabethan playhouse where Shakespeare's Hamlet Premiered.

Excavation of the shipwreck of the London that blew up in 1655.

A rabbit bone that shows that rabbits (native to Spain and France) arrived in England 1000 years earlier than previously thought.

An Anglo-Saxon burial site containing over 80 wooden coffins.

An early Roman settlement in Yorkshire.

And new radiocarbon dating that method that immensely vastly improves accuracy.

Here is the link to the article, which provides links to many of the individual stories.

https://www.theguardian.com/science/2019/dec/28/richard-iii-and-a-roman-rabbit-the-finds-of-the-decade


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.. Almost four decades later scientists returned to the mystery of this man from the Tagar culture which is known for its elaborate funeral rites, for example the use of large pit-crypts containing some 200 bodies which were set ablaze. 

As scientist Dr Elga Vadetskaya had observed, the heads of the dead were covered in clay, moulding a new face on the skull, and often covering the clay face with gypsum. 

So the expectation was - in deploying new technology on the man’s death mask - that the bones inside, though small fragments, would be human.

But they were not...

There was a ram's skull inside.


Unique case.

Here is the link for more about that.

https://siberiantimes.com/science/casestudy/features/mystery-of-unique-2100-year-old-human-clay-head-found-in-ancient-crematorium-with-a-rams-skull-inside/


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There is always plenty to do.  Research sites or finds.  Clean finds.

Work on your equipment. Get to know it a little better.  You can always do air tests, or get out in the yard.

You can also improve your equipment.  Strengthen weak points.  Make a new scoop, or just handy modifications.

Be sure you have batteries or whatever you need and that everything is in good order.

It sounds like South Carolina is scheduled to open up next week.  I would expect us to be not far behind.

Anyone trying to figure out when the Florida beaches might be opened might be interested in the Florida COVID statistics, which can be found using the following link.

https://floridadisaster.org/globalassets/covid19/dailies/covid-19-data---daily-report-2020-04-18-1639.pdf.

St. Lucie County shows 202 COVID cases, for example.  And I think it was something like 56 hospitalizations.  Of the hospitalized, about a quarter died.

I have serious questions about the data, but it is all we have.

With a forty year career in Health Information Management, my wife would like to be able to get this data in a spreadsheet.  Any quick tips.  Can we find it in spreadsheet form, or easily convert it to spreadsheet?

By the way, of the Florida COVID cases, a good percentage are confirmed travel related, and there is another big percentage that are unconfirmed but possible travel related.  Of the travel related cases in St. Lucie the vast majority are NY/NJ.

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The opening of Jacksonville beach attracted a lot of attention around the country, being applauded by one side and described as an absolute horror by the other.

You'll see some photos taken from an angle to make the beaches look totally packed, and other photos that show good spacing.  Photos can lie too.  I was thinking of posting a site that shows photos illustrating optical illusions, but it didn't occur to me how relevant that was until just now.  I'll have to look that up again.

The surf is small right now, so it isn't like we're missing any big opportunity.

Be safe,
TreasureGuide@comcast.ent

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

9/2/15 Report - Nice 1715 Fleet One Escudo. Buried Nazi Gold Train Found. First ECC Photo. Jamestown Discoveries.


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

1715 Fleet One Escudo

Very nice one escudo from the 1715 Fleet.  This is referred to as a Type II in the Sewall Menzel book.

The date appears to be 1712, if I am reading it correctly.  Looks like it could be a 2 over 1.

The other side would have the cross potent.

The mint is Lima, and the assayer (M) would be Felix Cristobal Cano Melagejo.

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This is an Indiana Jones mega-treasure story.  It appears that an armored train full of Nazi treasure has been discovered in a buried tunnel.  If you read the different accounts of this story it is hard to tell how much is true and how much is myth and how much is cover-up.  The different stories just don't stick together entirely.

Here are a couple of links.

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/sep/02/nazi-gold-train-poland-to-bring-in-army-to-help-in-hunt


http://my.xfinity.com/video/treasure-hunters-claim-to-find-nazi-treasure-train/517077059784/Comcast/Today_in_Video?cid=hero_sf_TIV

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When the Jamestown Rediscovery Archaeological Project started, the hope was to find the site of the original 1607 James Fort, which had been written off for more than 200 years as lost to shoreline erosion.
Since then, the team has discovered the fort and more than a million artifacts in the ground...
This is an ongoing excavation.  They keep coming up with more every week it seems.  
http://wydaily.com/2015/08/28/local-news-jamestown-unearthed-recycled-breastplate-stoneware-found-in-probable-cellar/

CT Scan technology is being used to analyze artifacts to help identify the presumed important persons buried under the church.

http://news.cornell.edu/stories/2015/08/cornell-technology-identifies-artifacts-jamestown-graves

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I have been hearing from people who are going to get a detector and start detecting and people who want to know the laws.  That happens every time after a big discovery.  People get excited and people that have never detected before get interested.

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Yesterday I wrote about the Environmental Metal Detecting Movement and the proposed Environmental Clean-up Crews.

Here is the first picture from an independent volunteer of the ECC (Dan B.).

Removed By Dan B. From A Boat Launch Area.
Just an example of the type of work provided by the ECC.  Good work Dan!

For those of you thinking of going out and buying your first detector, you can find a lot more of these than gold coins.  Just a reality check.

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Fred is a tropical storm and won't affect us.  It will dissipate in the middle of the Atlantic.


The Treasure Coast will only have something like a one foot surf through the weekend.

Happy hunting,
TreasureGuide@comcast.net