Written by the TreasureGuide for the exclusive use of the Treasure Beaches Report.
Below is the link for Volume I of The Luna Papers as published in the Florida Historical Quarterly.
The Luna papers : documents relating to the expedition of don Tristán de Luna y Arellano for the conquest of La Florida in 1559-1561 : Priestley, Herbert Ingram, 1875-1944, editor, translator : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive
And below is a link to Volume II.
The Luna Papers - Google Books
There is a lot of good historical research there.
The reference to the Florida Historical quarterly was found in the bibliography to the paper on Spanish shipbuilding in the New World, which I posted yesterday.
If you look through that bibliography you'll probably find more good things to read.
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Scott B. said,
I drove down from Fernandina today (Monday) to do a little detecting. I first tried at Golden Sands, then Ambersands. Nothing at either location other than can slaw. If only aluminum pieces were reales! Seaweed was also starting to wash up, not a good sign! Sorry I didn’t get any pictures.
I did chat with four other detecting hopefuls, but other than aluminum and a few fishing lures in seaweed, nobody I saw was doing any good on this part of the T.C...
Thanks for the report Scott.
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In some of the beach photos that I posted the past few days there were some showing a lot of seaweed. That is a sign of a building rather than eroding beach. It shows that lighter materials are being washed in and left deposited on the beach, so it is usually a good indication of what the sand is doing. For example, there was more seaweed up on the Seagrape and Turtle Trail beaches than down at John Brooks.
The wind over the past couple of days was shifting south. When the cold fronts have been coming though, many times the best erosion has been early and before the peak surf, then the wind quickly shifts to east and then south. It would help if we'd have a sustained north wind.
I personally didn't catch any north winds with the last blow. Maybe I missed the early north winds, because I was out of town when the front passed through Orlando. But by the time the peak surf occurred on the Treasure Coast, the wind was easterly, which means the beaches in general won't be eroding except where there are irregularities to the angles or rocks or jetties or things like that. But in the last few years we've had a couple of times in November when we got a high surf along with east winds, but the combined extra high tide and higher surf there eroded some of the dunes in a few spots. Those spots were few and scattered, but they provided some good old finds.
Tet erosion I showed down at Jensen was at a spot I remember hunting maybe ten or fifteen years ago when it eroded in a very similar manner. It produced some nice older finds.
Many of the same spots will erode over the years and decades, but most of them have been hurt by the amount of renourishment sand we've had in recent years. Still some of those same spots continue to erode more than other spots, even if a lot of the renourishment sand has to be removed to get back to old levels.
Some areas have been renourished so often in recent years that the areas haven't produced much for a long time.
It might help to keep a log of different areas and what they produce under different conditions. It helps remember how the different beaches respond to different weather. Remember under what conditions those areas have produced in the past.
Below is a link to an old post telling a bit about how I catalog beaches that I've detected in the past. I try to remember where the good spots were, what kind of finds were produced and under what conditions.
It is good to keep track of a lot of different spots, including those that produce under different conditions.
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Source: SurfGuru.com. |
The wind is ESE but the surf is still hitting the beaches straight on. The high tides are still good and high. As you can see the surf is decreasing.
Good hunting,
Treasureguide@comcast.net