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Friday, April 17, 2026

4/17/26 Report - Upcoming Treasure Coin Show and Auction Highlights. Extensive Shipwreck Survey.


From Sedwick...

following our sale of his 2 reales in our prior auction. The current offering focuses on 8 and 1 reales, carefully assembled over many years with an emphasis on quality, rarity, and important pedigrees from notable prior collections. It begins with some exceptional highlights, including an example of the earliest dollar-sized silver coin struck in South America, the famous Rincón 8 reales. The collection continues with a strong selection from the early Lima mint, featuring multiple varieties, especially from the period of assayer Diego de la Torre. Next are a few special “Star of Lima” issues, followed by a comprehensive run of pillars and waves coinage, with nearly all dates represented and including several very rare round presentation “Royals” (galanos). Comprising over 200 lots, this is one of the largest offerings of Lima cobs we have presented (if not the largest). We follow Lima with a singled-out collection of Potosí dated shield-type 8 reales; watch for several more very rare “Royals” in the regular Potosí cob offering.



Throughout World Coins we feature an outstanding group of Spanish bust gold minors, covering not just Spain itself but also all major colonial mints in Bolivia, Colombia, Guatemala, Mexico, and Peru. Nearly all are certified, many at the highest levels, including numerous “top pop” examples. This is a rare opportunity to acquire multiple dates and types in a single sale that would normally take years to assemble.

 

Speaking of Spain, in this auction we proudly present The Andalusi Collection, an important expansion into an historical area. These coins reflect a period when Spain was under a different cultural influence, offering a fascinating connection with the evolution of coinage. The selection includes some of the finest pieces offered in recent years, all certified by NGC, many at the top of their population reports. Carefully cataloged by Ana Serrano, a recognized expert in the field, this collection provides collectors with a clear and accessible introduction to this specialized area.


This event will take place at the SpringHill Suites by Marriott in Winter Park, Florida. Our regulars will remember this venue from our auctions prior to last year. This time, however, instead of educational talks, we will fill the room on the day before the auction (during lot viewing) with our inaugural Winter Park Coin Show.  Selected dealers from all over the Americas will have tables to browse while you wait to view lots. The date is May 6, from 10 am to 6 pm. Come see your friends or make new friends while you get ready for the auction!

 

As always, we are at your service with any questions or concerns. We wish everyone the best of luck and happy hunting!


NOTE: Floor auction lots will be available for viewing at the Central States show (Express lots by request only). All lots will also be available for viewing at our offices by appointment and on the day of the Winter Park Coin Show.

 

With thanks to all from the Sedwick & Associates, LLC team:


Daniel Sedwick, Augi García-Barneche, Cori Sedwick Downing

Michelle Heidt, Connor Falk, and Sarah Sproles



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The oldest is that of a Punic era ship dating to the fifth century BC, while other finds include 23 Roman ships, two late Roman ships, four medieval ships and 24 vessels from the early modern period.

Between them, the sunken items – which include an agile and fearsome 18th-century Spanish gunboat and the engine and propeller of a plane from the 1930s – tell the story of war, trade, exploration and settlement in and around one of the most strategically important waterways in the world...

Although the team has come across large ships from the 16th and 17th centuries, one of the most exciting finds has been the wreck of the Puente Mayorga IV, a small, late 18th-century gunboat of a type used for rapid, stealthy attacks on British ships of the line around Gibraltar. The attack craft would often disguise themselves as fishing boats before flinging off their netting and firing their prow-mounted cannon at their enemies...

Here is the link for the rest of the article.

Hidden treasures: Spanish archaeologists discover trove of ancient shipwrecks in Bay of Gibraltar | Archaeology | The Guardian

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Fort Pierce South Beach Friday Morning.



Surf Chart from SurfGuru.com.

Looks like they'll be a nice bump in the surf next week.

Good hunting,

Treasureguide@comcast.net





Thursday, April 16, 2026

4/16/26 Report - First Machine Gun(?). Coastal Erosion and Archaeological Sites. Great Site to View Spanish Colonial Artifacts.


Written by the TreasureGuide for the exclusive use of the Treasure Beaches Report.



The trail of an ancient Greek “machine gun”

Researchers identified clusters of quadrangular cavities arranged at short, regular intervals and following a curved path near the Vesuvian and Herculaneum gates. The shape and spacing of these marks closely match the profile of the projectiles fired by this machine, confirming that they were not caused by any other weapon currently known to archaeologists...

The polybolos, which literally translates as “multiple launcher,” was invented by Dionysius of Alexandria, a Greek engineer who worked in the weapons workshop of Rhodes in the 3rd century B.C. Its design was remarkably sophisticated for its time. The weapon used a system of gears and a chain mechanism to load darts automatically and fire them in bursts. In practice, it operated much like a modern machine gun that uses a belt-fed ammunition system...

Here is the link for more about that.

Archaeologists find evidence in Pompeii of an 'automatic' weapon used more than 2,000 years ago - AS USA

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I found an interesting archaeological survey of coastal sites being eroded or vulnerable to erosion.  Several Treasure Coast coastal sites are being eroded.  The salvage camps are included, but there are also sites whether human activity or nature has deposited different kinds of treasure in the vulnerable dune areas and are periodically eroded.  Much of this archaeological survey applies in the same way to those Treasure Coast sites.

Here are a few excerpts from the archaeological article.

Although our work identified previously unreported sites, professional archaeological survey has not been as effective a way to add to the site inventory as meeting with local residents. In the western Quoddy Region, the only newly identified site was reported by a collector (see Hrynick and Anderson Reference Hrynick and Anderson2021). In Nova Scotia, six of the newly identified sites were reported by collectors, including the most surprising addition to the site inventory: a Palaeoindian point recovered on an eroding shoreline (Betts et al. Reference Betts, Hrynick and Pelletier-Michaud2018). The disparity between avocational and professional identification of sites probably occurs because local residents tend to walk along beaches all year, rather than just for a few weeks during each summer. As a result, they have had many opportunities to identify eroding archaeological sites...

Ten or twenty years ago I did a post suggesting that archaeologist quit portraying the public as the enemy, first and most importantly, because the purpose of archaeology is to save history "for the public" and secondly because the public, if not alienated, will advance archaeology in several ways. The public will make discoveries, as this article describes. Avocational archaeologists contribute in many ways to archaeology and the public, if properly involved, will protect sites. Unfortunately, there are always dishonest individuals that put private gain before public interest, but that applies to archaeologists as well as the general public.  Saving history for the public doesn't mean hiding it from the public.

I do believe that since the time when I did that post, some progress has been made and the public is not so routinely viewed as the enemy of archaeology as was previously the case.  

Fifty-five flaked lithic artifacts from Sipp Bay are recorded in the RSPI collections. Some were excavated by Stoddard in 1951, but the vast majority were collected from the beach and erosional face by Kingsbury, Hayward, and the Knapton brothers. The collection reflects an opportunistic, visual collecting strategy: 20 of the 55 artifacts are bifaces, 21 are flakes, 12 are utilized flakes or unifaces, and two are cores. The catalog numbers used here refer to the RSPI’s system from the time of Stoddard’s research and are usually written on the artifacts.


Artifacts on the beach and in the water have often been eroded from the dunes.

The implication of this work is clear and unsurprising: coastal archaeological sites on the Maritime Peninsula are rapidly eroding and have been substantially eroded. As others (e.g., Young et al. Reference Young, Belknap and Sanger1992) have suggested, coastal erosion has preferentially obliterated older portions of the archaeological record in this region.

Here is the link for the entire article.

Characterizing the Erosion of Coastal Archaeological Sites on the Maritime Peninsula Using Survey, Collection Analysis, Excavation, and Modeling | American Antiquity | Cambridge Core

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Below is a small sample from nice web site showing the artifacts of 16th Century Isabella.



And here is the link to that site.

CHICHILTICALE.COM

I always recommend browsing as many Spanish colonial artifacts as you can if you want to find shipwreck treasure on the Treasure Coast.

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Surf Chart from SurfGuru.com.

Still looks like a jump in the surf next Monday.

Good hunting,
Treasureguide@comcast.net

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

4/15/26 Report - New 2026 Coins and a Mint Error to Watch For. Strikethrough Errors. Solving Missing Colony. Pleistocene Probability.

 

Written by the TreasureGuide for the exclusive use of the Treasure Beaches Report.



LITTLETON, NH – A Littleton Coin Company employee has discovered an unusual production error in a bag of Uncirculated 2026 quarters from the Philadelphia Mint featuring the Mayflower Compact.

The first of five newly designed quarters to celebrate the USA’s 250th anniversary, this coin features a Pilgrim couple facing West on the front, or obverse. The Mayflower ship, on which early English settlers journeyed in search of religious freedom, is the design featured on the back (reverse). 

Known as a “struck-through,” the newly discovered error occurred on the obverse of the Mayflower Compact quarter. It appears as an incuse impression between god and we in the motto in god we trust and between the dual dates of 1776 and 2026...


The noticeable, and unintended, impression occurred from a foreign element, according to Ken Westover, Littleton’s chief coin buyer. “It was likely stuck to the design die.”...


Here is the link for more of that article.

2026 Mayflower Compact Quarter Features Unexpected Error - Numismatic News

 It actually looks to me like the strike-through covers part of the word "God" on the obverse.

You can see it above.  

I don't believe I've seen a 2026 coin yet.  I'd like to find one of the new two-date coins whether it has the error or not, but I'll be looking for that error.

I've found some strike-through coins in the past.  Here is one.

Strike-through Error Quarter.


Here are the new dual date 2026 coins to watch for.



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A breakthrough in one of America’s oldest unsolved mysteries may have come not from law enforcement, but from an amateur investigator who uncovered a crucial clue hiding in plain sight: microscopic flakes of metal.

The case centers on the disappearance of the Roanoke Colony, a 16th-century English settlement that vanished from present-day North Carolina in the late 1500s, leaving behind only the word “CROATOAN” carved into a post....

The investigation highlights the growing role of independent researchers in solving historical puzzles. Using modern analytical tools and cross-referencing historical records, amateur sleuths are increasingly contributing to fields once dominated by academic institutions.

Experts caution that further testing and peer review are needed before definitive conclusions can be drawn. Still, the metal flakes — small as they are — may provide one of the strongest physical clues yet in a case that has baffled historians for more than 400 years....

Here is the link for the rest of the article.

How An Amateur Sleuth May Have Solved America's Oldest Cold Case - American Liberty News

The smallest clues can be overlooked and often require better technique and being more attuned.  (I bet that word will be popping up again in the near future.  Attuned.  Say it.  Let it resonate.) 

Amateurs are often ahead of the game.  They don't worry so much about the return on investment and are often more interested in the product rather than how much they'll benefit from it.  Solving the puzzle is the goal.  The best professionals are often those that would be doing the same thing even if they were getting paid.

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Probability in the Pleistocene: Origins and Antiquity of Native American Dice, Games of Chance, and Gambling is the title of an article I found very interesting.  I wasn't expecting that.  Take a look.

Here is a

Probability in the Pleistocene: Origins and Antiquity of Native American Dice, Games of Chance, and Gambling | American Antiquity | Cambridge Core

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Beautiful Fort Pierce Beach Wednesday Morning.

Beised the earth moving equipment, you can see the seaweed and building beaches.


Surf Chart from SurfGuru.com.

Looks like another front is expected.  We'll see how that one turns out.

It looks like the Fort Pierce North Causeway bridge is close to completion.  That will be a big help to some.  That closure must have been a big inconvenience for some people.

Good hunting,

Treasureguide@comcast.net

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Monday, April 13, 2026

4/14/26 Report - Gold Coin Treasure Hunt Out West. Indian River County Public Workshop. Snake Oil Bottle. Lab Grown Diamonds.

 

Written by the TreasureGuide for the exclusive use of the Treasure Beaches Report.


The gold ingots weren't technically official U.S. currency. Credit: Witter Coin

A new gold rush is coming to California. For the third year, San Francisco’s Witter Coin will host a treasure hunt across the city collectively worth over $50,000. The grand prize? An incredibly rare, $50 gold piece from 1851 valued at around $25,000...

The grand prize offered by Witter Coin is a rare example of what’s known as an 1851 Humbert "Slug." The octagonal piece is technically not U.S. currency, but an ingot minted by the official United States Assay Office of Gold and its assayer Augustus Humbert. Emblazoned with a bald eagle standing on top of a boulder, the $50 slug contained 2.5 ounces of gold, making it one of the largest currencies of its kind.

In an instagram post. Chandler explained that the store will release hourly clues on Saturday April 25 to help scavenger hunters pinpoint the location of the 1851 Humbert Slug as well as nine other historic collectible currency pieces. Each treasure will be hidden in “iconic San Francisco neighborhoods” with no “digging or trespassing” required to access them...

Here is the link for more about that.

$50,000 rare coin hunt will take over San Francisco | Popular Science

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April 14th 5:30 - 7:00 PM    Indian River County Public Workshop on Beach Preservation Plan 

Information below.



Thanks to DJ for that.

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Here is an interesting bottle for a quack cure peddled by "Old Bill" Rockefeller.

I just posted the following to TGBottleBarn.blogspot.com.


NyJol Bottle.


NuJol is in infamous quack remedy created in 1850 by "Old Bill" Rockefeller, father of John D. Rockefeller. The elder Rockefeller was the definition of "snake oil" salesman, claiming NuJol, which was made from pure petroleum, as a cure for everything from Cancer to constipation. John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil company continued offering the cure-all for sale up to the time of World War II.

The bottle has an H on the bottom, which could indicate one of numerous glass makers.  More research is needed.

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From PR Newswire.

WILMINGTON, Del.April 13, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Allied Market Research has published a comprehensive report titled 'Lab Grown Diamond Market by Manufacturing Method (HPHT and CVD), Size (Below 2 Carat, 2–4 Carat, and Above 4 Carat), Nature (Colorless and Colored), and Application (Fashion and Industrial): Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2023–2032.' According to the report, the global lab grown diamond market was valued at USD 24.0 billion in 2022 and is projected to reach USD 59.2 billion by 2032, expanding at a CAGR of 9.6% over the forecast period. Increasing consumer preference for ethically sourced and sustainable alternatives, rapid advancements in diamond synthesis technologies, surging demand from the fashion jewelry sector, and expanding industrial applications are collectively positioning the lab grown diamond industry as one of the most transformative and high-growth segments within the global luxury goods and materials sector

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Night at Fort Pierce Beach from Surfguru.com.



Surf Chart from SurfGuru.com.

Nothing new here.

Good hunting,

TreasureGuide@comcast.net

4/13/26 Report - Salvaged Silver Coins from the 1715 Fleet: Observations, Statistics and Useful Hints. Decreasing Surf This Week.

 

Written by the TreasureGuide for the exclusive use of the Treasure Beaches Report.


Fort Pierce South Beach Monday Morning from Surfguru.com.

The surf is decreasing but many beaches are building.

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I thought you might be interested in some of the details of a sample of sea salvaged 1715 Fleet silver cobs.  I looked a little deeper at the 2000 -20002 salvage records that I talked about two days ago.  Here are a few interesting observations. 

First, very few of the salvaged silver coins showed a date.  Without doing specific calculations, it looks like for the 2000 -2002 seasons (which is probably pretty close to what is still happening today) only around four percent of the salvaged silver coins showed ANY date when tagged. There were no examples in the three years of records of a full date.  I suspect that more coins would show a date after cleaning, but the fact remains that salvaged coins showing a date are fairly rare, and you can see that in auction prices. Dated coins are more desirable. 

It surprised me to see in these records that as rarely as dates are found, assayer initials are similarly rare.  From my own beach finds, it seemed that assayer initials were not as rate as dates, but I didn't really keep exact count.  When neither a date or assayer initial can be found, the date range can still often be narrowed down by other features of the coins design.

Going through the three years of salvage records, 113 of the coins (excluding those described as fragments or unknow) were half reales, 13 were one-reales, 17 were two-reales, 32 were four-reales, and 37 were eight-reales.  So, half reales were by far the most common, followed by eight and four reales.  That appears to me to be not too dissimilar from what you might expect from the beach, although personally, I've found greater proportions of the one and two reales along with the very common half-reales.  Of course, that changes from beach to beach.  Some beaches, Bonsteel perhaps being the best example, is known for a preponderance of half reales.

Going through a small sample of the half reales listed on the first page of the salvage records, which included a total of 18 half-reales, the average weight of a half reales was 0.9 grams with a range 0.3 to 1.2 grams.  That contrasts markedly from what you would expect from newly minted half reales, which should be close to 1.7 grams.  So, a majority of the salvaged half reales were significantly underweight.  Part of that is probably due to corrosion or sea-wear.

One nice thing about half reales is that even when you have a extremely underweight example, you can often still determine the denomination of the coin as well as date range corresponding to the king and corresponding monogram.  You can often identify the monogram from a small fraction of the half reale.

Here are the two common most common types you will find on 1715 beaches.

Most common are those minted under Phillip V, which display the following style of monogram.


Second most common would be those minted under Charles II, displaying the style of monogram shown below.

Most often you won't see the entire monogram, but enough to identify it.  There are many slight variations too.  These are stylized versions of the monograms.

Here is a post in which I talk more about the monograms.

The Treasure Beaches Report Direct From Florida's Treasure Coast.: 1/25/11 Report - King Philip and Charles Half Reale Cob Monograms

Looking at a relatively small sample of salvaged eight reales, the average weight of the sampled salvaged reales was 23.8.  A newly minted eight should weigh around 27.5 rams, so it seems that salvaged eight reales are also underweight something like four grams.  

So eight reales are about 3.7 grams underweight while half reales are about 0.8 grams underweight on average.  So half reales lost a lot less material than eight reales but a higher percent of their original weight.  Half reales lost nearly 30 percent while eight reales lost only about ten percent on average.

I won't make much of the exact numbers right now because they are based on very small samples. However, after browsing additional salvage records the general findings seem to hold pretty well.  

Of course, the salvage records could present several sources of error.  They weren't meant to be scientific studies.  Maybe in the future,  I'll look at the records in more detail to see how well these findings hold up.

These observations offer several clues that will be useful for the beach detectorist.  For example, you can expect silver cobs to be significantly underweight, especially the half reales, which are small as minted but will often be found to be very underweight when found.  I could theorize about how and why they are so often very underweight when found but won't get into that now.

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Once again I found Copilot making significant errors.  I've learned to use Copilot for my less serious and less complicated queries.  I don't put a lot of trust in Copilot.  Grok is more accurate and generally does a better job.  Both are useful though.  Copilot is sufficient for many routine queries.  It will, though, seem to miss important words in your question or use less than the most accurate sources for answering questions. The way I use AI is evolving and I suspect will continue to evolve.

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Surf Chart from SurfGuru.com.

As you can see, we're expectiig a gradually decreasing surf.

Good hunting,

Treasureguide@comcast.net