Showing posts with label wax seal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wax seal. Show all posts

Sunday, November 27, 2016

11/27/16 Report - A Couple Sight Finds From the 1715 Fleet. Increasing Wind and Surf.


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



Below is an email I received from John.

I saw your post about finding non metallic items today and thought I'd share one I found the day after the 7th Annual Treasure Hunters Cookout ( about a year ago. I found this at the top of Turtle Trail when I went into the bushes to take a leak…At first I thought Adventura or Jadeite, however...






It has been identified as Serpentine by Laura Strolia with some interesting history behind it. I got this information from elle:

New Jade (Serpentine) makes an exceptional meditation stone. It helps you to find inner peace. Serpentine was carried in ancient Assyria to request the gods and goddesses to provide double blessings. Nursing women used it to regulate their milk supply. Serpentine can be placed directly on the skin. It is an aid to kidney and stomach complaints, relaxes cramps and menstrual pain and helps women who are unable to reach orgasm due to tension.

The picture below shows a perfect match. I would venture a guess that it came off the Corrigan's wreck (Capitana?)



Thanks John!  You made today's post really easy for me.

A good number of finds have been the result of leaks.  You'd be surprised how often I hear about that.

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Concerning `1715 Fleet "sight finds, " I've posted a few in the past, including emeralds.

My personal favorite is the wax seal shown below.  I talked about it in more detail in my 2/13/16 post.  Unfortunately it does not photograph well.

Found Wax Seal.
The image on the seal is a bird postured very much like the one shown below - wings spread, head turned, breast and thighs prominent.  The wings on the wax seal are wider as is the breast of the bird.


Image Similar To That On The Wax Seal.
The wax seal was found at water's edge on a day of calm surf.  It was found just north of the Turtle Trail access.

It is hard to imagine that the wax lasted all those years.  

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Sunday was a little windy.  East northeast mostly.  The surf is increasing.  Monday it is supposed to be somewhere around 4 - 6 feet.   The wind will be more easterly though.

It could open up a spot somewhere.  I suspect good spots will be scarce, but there might be a few.

I haven't been out much.  My latest problem was a broken finger.  Its better now though.

Happy hunting,
TreasureGuide@comcast.net

Thursday, December 18, 2014

12/18/14 Report - Another Type of Once-In-A-Lifetime Find. Calm Surf and Poor Beach Detecting Conditions.


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


There are once-in-a-lifetime finds.  They aren't always big things like the Atocha or Queen's Jewels.  Sometimes they are little things, but you just don't expect to ever find another one.

Here is one of those for me.  It isn't a gold coin.  I don't really consider them once-in-a-life time.  I've found two of them in one weekend.  One was from the 1900s and one from the 1700s.   I don't ever expect to find two from two different centuries in one weekend again.  But what I'm talking about today is something different.

You can see it here.  You probably can't tell what it is.  It isn't the best picture.  I haven't been able to get a really good picture of it. 

It is a wax seal.  I'll try to point out some of the detail in another picture. 

When you look up wax seals you'll mostly find the lead or carved stones that are used to make an impression in the wax.  This is the wax with the impression on it.

I don't ever expect to find another.  I find it hard to believe that I even found one.  It was eye-balled  at the edge of the water on a calm surf day, very much like today.  The sky was blue and the water was calm. 

It was found at Turtle Trail.

But the thing that amazes me is that the wax lasted so long.  It was evidently covered by sand and protected.  I don't think it could ever have survived very long in rough surf.

I tried to highlight some of the details in this picture.

The shape seems to be four double lobes. See the red outline.

Inside is an eagle.  To the right, I drew a red line around the one wing.  You can see it best in the picture.  I outlined the head of the eagle, some of the body and the leg feathers.

Below is another image of a wax seal which is similar but not the same.  It shows about the same type of eagle, with wings spread, leg feathers, turned head, etc.



There are no words that I've been able to see on the wax seal I found.

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The surf on the Treasure Coast today was very calm.  It was almost like a summer beach again. 

The cuts that I showed a few days ago are mostly filled again.

The front of the beach shown in the first picture below had a lot of new mush sand on the beach front.

Treasure Coast Beach As Seen Near Low Tide This Morning.




The above video shows the calm surf gently lapping at the beach.

There were some shells and pieces of fossils.   There might be a surprise like my wax seal.  You never know.

Happy hunting,
TreasureGuide@Comcast.net

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

5/10/11 Report - Back Dunes as Source of Cobs & Wax Seal



Wax Seal Found at Plate Fleet Beach.

This wax seal was eye-balled at the waterline near Corrigans. I'm now pretty sure that is what it is. You can see the right wing and part of the breast of a bird. It looks very much like the bird on the seal of New Mexico. Somebody said they would try to figure out who the seal belonged to if I could get a better photo, but that is the best photo I can get. The eagle appears to have both wings spread and head turned to the left as you view the photo. That's the best I can make out.



In an earlier post I mentioned the back dunes as being a source of shipwreck cobs and treasure coins. As you might know, you are not allowed on the dunes. And the sea oats that have been planted on many of the dunes are protected.

In my survey I listed the face of the back dunes and the toe of the back dunes as one of the zones. And as you might know, that zone was tied with the edge of the water for being the two most common places where cobs and treasure coins have been found. (Cobs and coins are not the same thing.)

I also mentioned that I have traced old shipwreck items from the back dunes. You might have wondered how that was done.

First, on some beaches such as Green Turtle Beach, the dunes are far back from the water and consist of small low mounds. At other beaches, there is a cliff at the back of the beach where the dunes have eroded away in the past, such as Wabasso or Turtle Trail.

At Green Turtle Beach where the dunes are way back and small, there is no way that old shipwreck treasure will fall out of the back dunes and end up on the beach in front. Those dunes are seldom eroded any how because they are so far back. They are also small and created by the wind. The only time they will erode is when the water washes over the dunes, as it does only on very rare occasions such as the 2004 hurricanes.

At other places where there is a significant cliff on the face of the dunes, the beach is narrower and the cliff relatively close to the water's edge. The sand behind the cliff has not been disturbed by Mother Nature for years and years and holds some very old items. How they got there is hard to tell. They could have been dropped near the surface a long time ago and been buried by the blowing sand over time. Maybe they were deposited there with the sand by large storms long ago. In any case they are there and have not been moved for a long time. It is also rather hard to get a fix on how deep in the sand those old items are.

You might ask how I know there are old items in the dunes at places like that. If you watch those dunes you will see when they do eroded. The water will generally undercut the bottom and the sand above will slide down the slope to the toe of the dune - sometimes in slabs.

When that happens you can detect the fresh slab and see what it holds. If you can tell where the slab came from then you will know the source of the objects.

There have been times when I detected slabs and other sand that came from the back dunes and found old objects and then detected the beach below that and found the same type of objects in basically the same condition. Since the fresh slabs have not been in the water, it is evident that the objects were coming from above rather than being deposited by the incoming water.

One example would be the dunes at one beach that is filled with small caliber bullets. I've found numbers of those bullets in the sand that came fresh from the dunes and also found the same type of spent bullets in the wet sand directly below the fresh slabs.

On beaches like that you'll also find light junk materials at the base of the dunes. The various levels of the eroded sand gets mixed together at the base, and some light junk will get washed up from the middle beach and deposited at the base of the cliff.

If you are there at the right time you can trace objects coming out of the dunes for yourself.

When you find objects coming out of the dunes, see if you can tell where the sand came from and then you might be able to determine the layer that those objects were in before they were eroded out of the dune.

Like I said, that is just one example.

It is a good practice when scanning a beach to try to determine if any old object is coming down from the back beach or being washed in by the water. Therefore, in addition to scanning south and north from the object, scan east and west from the object too. Scanning north and south (along the beach) might give you a clue to the existence of a coin line, and scanning east and west (perpendicular to the beach) might tell you if things are being washed in or out.

One scan pattern that I often use after finding something interesting is a spiral around the spot where I dug the object. That way you'll find any other objects in the same general area in any direction.

You can then repeat the spiral pattern on the nest object. (I also often use the spiral scan pattern in the water.) You might be able to see a distribution pattern.
That can be very helpful as I've explained in the past.


There is a new survey for you to answer in this blog. All votes are appreciated.


Treasure Coast Beach Forecast and Conditions.

The sea is calm today. The wind has been changing frequently lately. For a while it will come out of the south and then before long out of the west again. It hasn't been significant enough to affect much of anything anyhow.

Today and Wednesday the sea will remain very calm - good time to water hunt or hunt the low tide area. On Thursday the sea is predicted to be a little rougher. Nothing that will help beach conditions much, but it will probably make it tougher to get in the water or so far out at low tide.


Happy Hunting,
TreasureGuide@comcast.net