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Geologyhound

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Geologyhound last won the day on October 22 2023

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  • Gender
    Male
  • Location:
    Southwest Ohio
  • Interests:
    Geology, lapidary, metal detecting, prospecting, pumpkin carving
  • Gear In Use:
    XP Deus 2, White's Spectrum XLT, White's GoldMaster 4B, XP MI-6, Bullseye pinpointer, sluice box, spiral pan, 10" and 18" rock saws, high speed sander, Diamond Pacific Genie, flat lap, rock tumblers

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  1. A gentleman on another website clued me in that the “tree tap” is actually a brass tent rope adjuster. No idea of the age, but that style was in use during the Civil War. I will have to examine it closely and see if there is a patent date or any writing.
  2. I found that brass chunk next to the old kitchen/dining building. So you are probably exactly right! This area is having a celebration later in the year, and my contact was interested in any artifacts which might have historical significance to the site so they could display them. I will have to ask and see if they had a bell there. Thanks!
  3. I recently obtained permission for my club to hunt a sizable piece of property with historical group usage going back over 100 years. Over 40 of us showed up on the designated day. I heard several people say their first signal of the day was a silver dime! By the afternoon, I was getting a little discouraged with a wheat or two, some bullets, a fishing weight and a couple modern coins. I had also found a 12 pound section of an old brass pot or urn. Based on the radius of curvature, that thing must have been huge, not to mention extremely heavy! I had to make a special trip back to the car for that thing, as it was too heavy to carry with me all day. I finally broke the silver drought with a 64 Rosie after lunch. A while after that, another club member hunting near me found a beautiful Ben Franklin silver half. I told him it was gorgeous, and mentioned I had never found a half outside a seeded hunt - let alone a silver one. He encouraged me and said I will find one sooner or later and it might be a Walker or even a Barber. As he moved on, I hit a nail patch and decided to slow down and go over it. I was using my Deus 2 with the 11x13 coil - not optimum for dense nails, but I wasn’t going back to the car for the 9” that late in the day. After a little comparison, I switched to the Tekkna program. From what I have read, it might not be the best program for a large coil and dense ferrous targets, but it was more stable and much quieter in the dense nails than my custom program. After walking two lines through the nails, I had recovered four wheats and a worn cuff link (?), and figured there may be more hiding. Sure enough, I hit a nice mid-90’s signal that was so strong it had to be a can lid or the like. But, with multiple nearby wheats, I was digging it anyway. About three inches down, I caught my breath as I saw a silver disk emerge. Surely, it was an aluminum punch like another one I had found, but then I saw the reeding on the edge. I was flabbergasted to see Lady Liberty emerge from the dirt! Despite the dense iron (based on the stain, it would appear the coin was actually in contact with iron) using Tekkna and the 11x13 worked well. I would say this is the best coin I have ever found! In hindsight, I wonder what would have happened if my club member had said I would find a $20 gold piece…🤪 I also found a maple tree tap and what I think is a musket ball. The wheats range from 1911 through the 1950’s, with only the 1920’s not represented. We are working on permission to go back again!
  4. I’d say keep hunting there but I don’t think you need the encouragement…😊
  5. Still, one Barber is a good day for me. Two is great! Congrats!
  6. Is it magnetic? If you scrap it across an unglazed porcelain plate, does it leave a streak of a particular color?
  7. Can you scratch any of these with a knife blade? My second question would be if you drip any dilute hydrochloric acid on them will it fizz? Most carbonate rocks will react with acid and fizz and can be scratched with a knife blade. If they won’t fizz and can scratch a knife blade, then I would guess at quartzite.
  8. Almost looks like an old mile marker post. Do you happen to have a picture of a fresh broken - not cut surface?
  9. Looks like vein agate (cryptocrystalline silicon dioxide). I suspect some of the coloration may be due to surface iron staining, but yellow coloration is fairly common in agate.
  10. It looks a little like carborundum (silicon carbide). Still industrial byproduct or discarded product, but it would explain the color and the hardness.
  11. I did manage to edit the reply posts, or else there would’ve been three duplicates. The real problem is I can’t figure out how to delete a duplicate post.
  12. Looks like a nifty design! Is this something you developed or something you found somewhere?
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