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Saturday, February 7, 2026

2/7/26 Report -Variety of New Coins to Watch For. Gold and Silver Prices Drop. West Winds to Switch Before Long.

 

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




To celebrate the Nation's Semiquincentennial (SemiQ), the United States Mint is proud to unveil one-year-only changes to well-known American coinage, such as the circulating dime, quarter, and half dollar. The Mint will also release special numismatic coins and medals in 2026 featuring unique designs and enhancements for core products and annual releases.

These are the new SemiQ circulating coins of 2026.










Watch for these new coins to show up in your pocket change or in your scoop.

I still occasionally see some of the bicentennial quarters marked 1776- 1976 popping up from time to time.

There were commemorative coins minted for the centennial in 1876, but the first circulating commemorative U. S. coin was the 1921 Peace Dollar to commemorate the end of World War I.

OK, so now I have some bicentennial coins and expect to get some semi quincentennial coins before long, so the next ones I'll look for will be the 2076 issues, but by then we might not have metallic coins at all.

Let's see who is the first to find and show their semiquincentennial coins.

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Commodities prices, including gold and silver dropped recently.  


One Year Chart Showing Recent Gold Price Drop


The drop was large when considered in a short-term basis, but in my opinion the drop was to be expected, considering the long-term increases and the more recent dramatic prices increases prior to the drop.  My view is that it was to be expected and is basically a correction.

Silver and other metals did something similar.  Below is the silver one-year chart.


One Year Silver Price Chart.

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Fort Pierce Jetty -South Beach.


Just a lazy surf.  The surf is north but the wind is from the west.


Surf Chart from SurfGuru.com.


Looks like the wind will shift before long.

The tides are moderate.

Good hunting,
TreasureGuide@comcast.net


Friday, February 6, 2026

2/6/26 Report - Detectorists Finds Rare Figurine. PAS Expands. Blog Readership and Museums.

 

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


Image Credit: British Museum as published in ZMEScience.com.


The decoration was uncovered in 2024 by a metal detectorist scanning the dirt near Harlow, not far from London. It’s a high-status ornament that would have been used as a carriage fitting...

The owner wanted to signal that he’s living the good life, while also showing that Romans crushed the locals...

This specific find likely wouldn’t have been saved for the public if the British government hadn’t updated the Treasure Act. Previously, objects had to be made of precious metals (gold or silver) or be part of a hoard to be legally declared “treasure.” Under the 2023 amendment, other “significant” finds like this panther can now also fall under the government’s protection.

This means that instead of the figurine disappearing into a private collector’s drawer in New York or Tokyo, it was diverted to the British Museum. The find will be officially valued by an independent board. It will be valued, and the reward (often thousands of pounds) is typically split 50/50 between the person who found it and the owner of the land. It’s a system that encourages people to do the right thing and report their finds rather than selling them on the black market...

Here is the link to the entire article.

Rare Roman Panther Figurine with Its Paws on a Severed Head Is a Propaganda Tool Used in Britain

So the PAS has expanded to include more finds.  Of course it expands.  Never expect it to contract.

I wonder how fair the evaluation will be.

They presume that it would disappear if in private hands but not in the public trust.  Too often things disappear from museums or are never displayed.

In the past I've done polls on the publics access to the materials that are held by museums for the public.  One poll that I conducted found that only 5% of the respondents had ever seen any of the coins or artifacts held in the Florida Collection. The Florida Collection holds many coins and other items by the local salvage companies. That seems a very low number especially considering that the respondents were people that read this blog and are more interested in treasure than the general public. See The Treasure Beaches Report Direct From Florida's Treasure Coast.: 10/12/13 Report - The Florida Collection of Treasure Coins and Artifacts and The Poll Results

That seems to be a very ineffective use of public resources.  If you want to actually see the items in the Florida Collection - good luck.  Most people know little about it - not even where it is located.  On the other hand, many respondents (over 75%) have visited the Fisher Museums and the McLarty.  Those institutions provide better access to the public than the Florida Collection.  If you want to see the coins salvaged on the Treasure Coast and taken by the state for the benefit of the public, I guess you can pay a hefty price to buy one of Allan Craig's books, which are not complete and are outdated.  My opinion is that the publicly funded institutions that supposedly take control of those items to preserve them for the public are actually doing a pretty good job of keeping them private.  Furthermore, I believe that publication of information about those items should be available to the public easily and inexpensively. Not only are they supposed to be held for the benefit of the public, but the public pays for them.

The McLarty Museum is part of Sebastian Inlet State Park and is one state museum that does a good job.  Many of the readers of this blog have visited the McLarty.  The admission fee is modest and the museum is assisted by volunteers, who you will find very helpful.  The mueum is on the site of a1715 survivor's camp.  

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I have a lot of cleaning to do.  I started some electrolysis back in December that I never finished. I need to get back to that.  

A cob I found in December I put aside and haven't seen it since.  I'll have to do a search or try to figure out where I put it.  I've spent more time looking for it since I brought it home than it took me to find on the beach.  

I think I might have posted one photo of it.

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I've been burning a lot of my paper and cardboard recyclables in the fireplace rather than putting them out lately.  Good cheap fuel for keeping warm on a cold day.

It will be warming up soon though.

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Fort Pierce South Jetty (South Beach Zoom) Friday Afternoon.


Surf Chart for Fort Pierce South Jetty Area from SurfGuru.com.

The surf is a little rough but not real high.

We'll have some north winds around Saturday.

Good hunting,

Treasureguide@comcast.net

  



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My wife's mother recently passed away at 98 years of age.  My mother passed just a few years ago, as did my wife's mother.  One of those was 94 and the other 95.  We've watched the process as their health and capabilities deteriorated and we've been responsible for settling too many estates. It is a tiring to be responsible for health care decisions and managing affairs.  They were different people and they were in different situations.  One passed at home.  One was a nursing home for s short period, and the other went to assisted living, then had a hospital stay and then went to a nursing home. They all confronted similar difficulties and triials.  They slowly lost control of their lives, became less capable and less independent, and all three came to the realization that the end of life was near before finally passing.  In my opinoin they were cared for in a way that despite what you might expect, did not respect their humanity.  




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The Treasure Beaches Report Direct From Florida's Treasure Coast.: 4/24/16 Report - Top Treasure Coast Treasure Hunter Says No Silver Rings Ever Found On 1715 Wrecks.

Thursday, February 5, 2026

2/5/26 Report - Spanish Colonial Silver Rings: The Evidence and the Mystery. Around the Treasure Coast in Beach Cams.


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


Bathtub Beach Beach Cam View Thursday Morning.

First, I decided to check some of the beach cams this morning.  It is a slow morning.  Cooler temperatures and very small waves at long intervales.  SWS winds.  Don't expect any new erosion today.


Jensen Beach Web Cam Thursday Morning.


The positive side of this is that you can get down into the low tide zone and where permissible, even do some shallow water metal detecting if you can take the cool temperatures.


Fort Pierce Jetty South View Thursday Morning.


Nothing much going on at either Fort Pierce of Sebasstian this morning.


Sebastian South Beach View Thursday Morning.
s
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From Sedwick & Associates...

Sedwick & Associates will be accepting consignments throughout the month of February. The consignment deadline for Auction 39 is March 10.


Meetings are available by appointment at our office in Maitland, Florida, approximately 30 minutes from Orlando International Airport. We will also be available during the Puerto Rico Coin Show in San Juan, Puerto Rico, February 18 to 21, registration required, and at the ANA National Money Show in Savannah, Georgia, February 26 to 28, Booth 111.

In early March, we will be meeting clients in South Florida and will then travel to London and Munich.


Auction 39 will be held live and in person May 6 to 9, 2026, at the SpringHill Suites by Marriott Winter Park, Florida. The sale will include colonial coinage, cob coins, paper money, artifacts, medals, ancients, and related historical material from the entire world.


A small boutique bourse with a limited number of established dealers will be held on May 6, the day prior to the auction, together with a dedicated section for lot viewing. We believe this added opportunity for direct interaction in advance of the sale will benefit both dealers and collectors.


Hotel reservations for the May auction are available at the following link:
Book your group rate for Sedwick & Associates Auction #39


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One reader recently brought up a topic that I addressed a few times over the past decade or more, but for me it is still something of a mystery.  It comes down to this: many silver rings are found by detectorists on the wreck beaches that appear by all accounts to be from the wrecks, but the top treasure salvage guy of the Treasure Coast once said that there has never been a silver ring found on a 1715 Fleet wreck.  That fellow worked the 1715 Fleet wrecks longer than anyone else, so there is really no better authority on the subject.  It leaves me wondering how to account for the apparent discrepancy.


I checked the Mel Fisher artifact database and searched for silver rings. I found no silver rings in the database. That supports the idea that if there are any at all, they are rare.


The next source that I checked was Deagan's book, Artifacts of the Spanish Colonies of Florida and the Caribbean, `1500 - 1800.  That book describes Spanish Colonial artifacts found on both land archaeological sites and under water. Thousands of finger rings are documented. Many are non-metallic. Many are made of jet and many others are non-metallic, made of glass, stone, wood and even horse hair.  Of the rings made of metal, the vast majority are made of copper alloys, and a smaller number are made of gold. Only one made of silver was described and pictured. It was from Santa Catalina and shows a flame-crowned heart that is very similar to the heart-shaped cobs that I've discussed in the past. 


Many beach-found silver rings appear to be from the wreck sites and were found along with reales and other wreck items and in close proximity.  That evidence seems very convincing as well.  


So the question remains: why are there so many silver rings attributed to the wrecks found on the beach while the archaeological and salvage records indicate that Spanish Colonial silver rings are so rare?  I haven't yet found a satisfying answer.


Why are Spanish Colonial silver rings are so rarely reported in the archaeological record or salvage records, yet found so often on the wreck beaches?  Could it be that the silver rings found on the beaches were the possessions of the lower classes or sailors rather than part of the cargo and therefore not distributed along with those more precious items that are salvaged on the wreck sites?  Perhaps the silver rings were on bodies or carried by individuals trying to survive the wreck.  There are other possibilities.  The silver rings could being trade goods and perhaps associated with post-wreck salvage efforts rather than the original wrecking.      


The discrepancy between the archaeological and salvage records and the number of old silver rings found by detectorists near wreck sites remains a bit of a mystery to me.  


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Surf Chart from Surfguru.com.

Looks like a higher surf Sunday.

Good hunting,
Treasureguide@comcast.net

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

2/3/26 Report - Objects Composed of Parts from Different Eras. Matching Finds Made Many Years Apart.

 

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



It’s not every day that you find a medieval wheel cross, and it’s even rarer when the find matches another centuries-old artifact discovered over four decades earlier. But wait, it gets better. A volunteer made the discovery...

Volunteer archaeological conservator Juliane Rangnow found the bronze wheel cross, dated to the 10th or 11th century, in Germany’s Havelland region. Most notably, it perfectly matches a mold that came to light over 40 years ago in the Berlin borough of Spandau.

Its correspondence to a previously discovered casting mold “is unique for an archaeological find from this period,” and “it is also exemplary of the early Christianization of Brandenburg,”... 

The wheel cross finding took place during detector surveys, and the site also revealed coins, pieces of gold-plated jewelry, and iron weapons from around the same time period. Rangnow discovered the wheel cross near wooden church remains, after which it was restored and measured. It is the only known cast of the mold in question, called the “Spandau Cross,” which archaeologists unearthed in 1983 at Spandau’s Slavic castle rampart...

Here is the link for more of that story.

1,000-Year-Old Bronze Cross Perfectly Matches Mold Found 40 Years Ago, Shocking Archaeologists

It is always fun to find something that goes with something else you found in the past.  One of my most recent examples of that was the recent find of a railroad signal lamp that matches a signal lamp lens that I found a couple years ago.

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The Gosfield seal is made of a medieval silver seal bezel surrounding an ancient Roman gemstone...

A metal detectorist discovered the medieval seal in Gosfield, in the eastern county of Essex, in the fall of 2024. But a recent analysis of the seal by experts with the U.K.'s Portable Antiquities Scheme has revealed that the 800-year-old object prominently featured a 2,000-year-old Roman gemstone at its center.

"It's not common to have an object composed from two different time periods," Lori Rogerson, ... the finds liaison officer for Essex, told the BBC ...

The silver seal is just 1 inch (27.5 millimeters) long, and the entire keepsake weighs 0.23 ounces (6.44 grams), according to the entry for the artifact in the Portable Antiquities Scheme database. A loop attached to one end of the oval seal suggests it was suspended, perhaps on a necklace, rather than being a signet ring...

Here is the link for more about that.

Rare medieval seal discovered in UK is inscribed with 'Richard's secret' and bears a Roman-period gemstone | Live Science

Things are not always one age or another.  Sometimes, like with this ring, they are made of parts from more than one age period.  That can make figuring out the age of the find difficult.  I'd consider the item to be the age of the latest or most modern component.  But that might the loss might be much more recent.  People carry around old things sometimes.  It is possible to find a very old coin that was lost and found more than once.  I once found a ring with a mounted treasure coin that I have reason to believe was lost three times before I found it.  I think it was lost in a ship that was salvaged before being put on another ship that sank.  The coin was then salvaged and mounted as jewelry in modern times, and lost and found again.  I can't definitely prove all that, but that is what my research suggested.

All of those now very popular mounted treasure coins are all something like that. On older coin is mounted in a newer piece.

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Surf Chart from SurfGuru.com.

As you can see the surf will be calming down.  The wind had already changed and will be coming more from the south before the next front comes through.

Good hunting,

TreasureGuide@comcast.net.

Monday, February 2, 2026

2/2/26 Report - A Look at Some Indian River County Beaches Today. Photos and Beach Cam Shots.

 

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


Turtle Trail South of the 2nd Flag Pole Around Early Afternoon Monday


I checked out some of the Indian River County beaches today.

First was Turtle Trail.  There were a couple detectorists returning from the south.

It was a convex beach.  Sand had been accumulating.  There were very few signals along the entire stretch.  I saw no cuts.

The swells were pushing the water pretty high on the slope for being low tide.

Here are a few more photos from Turtle Trail.  Below that are some photos from Wabasso.


Turtle Trail by the 2nd Flag Pole Looking North.


From the Turtle Trail Access Monday.


In Front of the Turtle Trail Access Monday.


From the Turtle Trail Access Early Afternoon Monday.


Here are three Wabasso photos.  No cuts were observed at Wabasso.


Wabasso Monday Afternoon.


In Front of Wabasso Access Monday.
Wabasso Monday.

Golden Sands Park was closed.

My next stop was Ambersands.  


Ambersands Monday.


Ambersands Monday Afternoon.


Ambersands was a little different.  There were small cuts near the dunes.

And there were shells along the low water line.  Still signals were very scarce.

Before going on this morning I checked a few web cams.

Here is one of those.

8 AM Monday.  Fort Pierce South Beach Zoom.


The water was high there at high tide and hitting the foot of the dunes.  Other than that no obvious erosion.

Below is the beach cam from Sebatian Inlet (South Beach View) at around the same time.  The surf was really rough around high tide but still no cuts.


Sebastian South 8 AM Monday.


Here is the same view some time after 9 AM.  Notice the excavator on the beach.  Looks like it was moving some pipes.



Below is the surf chart.   Notice that the surf will be a touch higher tomorrow.

Su

Surf Chart from SurfGuru.com.

Good hunting,
TreasureGuide@comcast.net

Sunday, February 1, 2026

2/1/26 Report - Visiting a Couple Treasure Coast Beaches Today to Detect in the Cold. WWII Poem. Current Condition

 

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


Icy Treasure Coast Morning.

I bundled up this morning three layers deep.  I even put on my old driving gloves that I wore back one day on Christmas Eve 1984 when I stopped at John Brooks on my way up the coast.  It was freezing then, but back then I was still acclimated to northern winters, and the cold didn't bother me so much.  That time, though, the wind was coming from north.  Today it was from the West.  

The 1984 hunt was a lucky one. It was the first time that I found so many reales so quickly.  Today, however. there were no cuts and I found nothing interesting.  After all these years I remember the 1984 hunt when the wind and frigid temperature quickly chased another detectorist off the beach before giving it a try.  I remember looking back and seeing a bundled up fellow walk out onto the beach, stand for a few seconds, shake his head and turn around and leave  

My wife stayed in the car and I wanted to get to my destination before t was too late, so I didn't detect very long, but I still have those reales and know exactly which ones they are.


John Brooks Around Noon Sunday.


Today there were no cuts at John Brooks.  The swells were pushing the water high up the slope even near low tide.


Surf At John Brooks Sunday.


The slope was mushy and I just detected a little while, and didn't run across any good targets.


Walton Rocks Sunday.


Walton Rocks had some small cuts - usually a foot or less.   They were freshly sharpened.  The dips were older and the cuts had moved migrated a little since last time I was there.

I dug a couple seasoned modern coins.  They were pretty deep.  There were still many junk targets - including a lot of copper and iron.  

One other detectorist was braving the cold.

Rocks At Water Line.


I'm sure there are some good targets there for the patient detectorist.


Walton Rocks Sunday.


I didn't expect much today because I checked the web cams before going.  The Fort Pierce South Beach Zoom showed the following.


8:30 AM Sunday Fort Pierce Jetty Beach Cam (South Beach Zoon View)


That cam view was just after high tide, but you can see the water hitting the foot of the dunes.  You can also see the small swells running parallel to the beach.  No cuts.

I also checked the beach cam Saturday and during the afternoon the wind driven waves were running parallel to the beach then.  They were similar this morning.

In summary, I wasn't seeing anything on the beach cam that made me expect John Brooks to be cut, and that was right.  Walton Rocks hadn't changed much since the last time I was there.

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Extreme Cold Warning.

For the Extreme Cold Warning, dangerously cold wind chills as low as 14 to 20 degrees expected. For the Freeze Warning, hard freezing temperatures as low as 22 to 27 degrees expected. * WHERE...All counties in east central Florida, including Volusia, Lake, Seminole, Orange, Brevard, Osceola, Indian River, Okeechobee, Saint Lucie, and Martin. * WHEN...From 7 PM this evening to 10 AM EST Monday. * IMPACTS...Frost and freeze conditions could kill crops, other sensitive vegetation and possibly damage unprotected outdoor plumbing.

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I mentioned a 98-year old relative that passed away yesterday. During World War II she worked for Scaife Company, a manufacturing company, that during the war made artillery shells.  In a Company Newsetter from 1945 was the following poem that I thought some of you might like



From Sept. 1945 Issue of Scaife News.

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Seems like we need a change in wind and surf.

But maybe some of the other beaches were better today.  I only saw two, but I did look around a couple bends and didn't see a lot of difference.

Good hunting,
Treasureguide@comcast.net

Saturday, January 31, 2026

1/31/26 Report - Tips for Identifying and Dating Targets. Case Study. Remote Viewing Techniques for Target ID.

 

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


Surf Chart from SurfGuru.com.

Later Saturday we might see something start to develop again.  

This morning there is a small lazy surf and a high tide.  The low tide will be around noon.

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Not too long ago I posted a fragment of what appeared to be a gold and diamond something or other, and the person who found it naturally wanted to know if it was old.  That was made more difficult by not knowing exactly what kind of object it was.  We were missing a lot of information that could have been helpful to better identify the object and its age.  First, like with many such requests, the submission was lacking basic dimensions, and there was nothing in the photo for size comparison.  That information could of been helpful.

Second, the item evidently hadn't been tested for gold content.  We don't know for sure that it was gold. That information could have been helpful too.  Modern gold is often 9, 10, 14 or 18K, although there are exceptions and some countries use more high purity gold, such as India and China.  And there are various types of plating too.  Deletion gilding is not uncommon on Spanish Colonial items from South America.  Some forms of electroplating are more modern, but gilding is an old process.  It gets complicated, but all that kind of information can help determine the source or age of an item.  

A third important thing is context.  Where was the item found?  Was it found with other items or coins that can be dated?  Was it found in area where shipwreck items have been found in the past or where some other historic event took place?  

All of these things can add to the picture.  Any one piece of information by itself probably will not determine if an item is old or not, but if you put together the whole picture you can get a better idea.

Many items have been used over the centuries without much or any change, such as simple gold or silver bands.  Claddagh rings have been used for centuries and are still being made.  Crucifixes have been used for centuries, although there are some diagnostic features or forms that might help determine the source or date range.  Many styles have lasted centuries.  

It is often difficult to determine the source or date of an item, especially from a photo.  Things can end up in strange places.  A 2020 coin can get dropped on an old shipwreck site.  Items from different dates and even shipwrecks can get intermingled.  

There can be all kinds misleading clues and tricky questions involved with determining the source or date of a mystery item and that is why it helps immensely to have all the information possible, including the things I mentioned above when submitting a mystery item to be solved.  Help us help you by providing as much information as possible, even if the information might seem obvious or unimportant to you.

If you submit a mystery item, don't be afraid to submit more information or something more you learned after the initial post.  If you were motivated to have the item tested, for example, let us know what you learned.

Sometimes it takes years to learn about an item.  I've found things that I only figured out after several years went by.  

As an example, for years I thought the item shown below was probably a finial.  It is hollow on the right end and looks like it might fit onto something.




You can't tell from the photo alone, but the material is lead and it is less than two inches long.  And the context, which you'd have no way of knowing unless I told you, was from canon emplacement on an island where there were battles during the 1700 and 1800s, which was evidenced by many artifacts of the era such as musket balls, grape shot, military buttons etc.  Furthermore, it was dug just a few feet from where there was a cannon.  In retrospect, I wonder why I didn't recognize the item as soldier art much earlier?  

The mussel of the artifact is shaped very much like that of the cannon from the island and the item shares many of the same features as the actual cannon. Below is a picture of the real cannon.  Compare the muzzle on miniature shown above.  


The actual cannon also has rings around the barrel, very like the carving.


Even though the miniature is not an exact replica, I am now pretty confident that some soldier with some lead, maybe a musket ball or two, decided to spend some idle time making a little cannon.  It took me years to come to that conclusion, I think partly because soldier art just wasn't something that I paid much attention to in the past and the miniature is much more decorative than the actual cannon. 

A reader of this blog suggested that it might be soldier art.  I am thankful for that and now feel highly confident that is what it is. Considering ALL the evidence and matching the artifact to an actual a cannon from the site, seems to make it all fit.  The lead would be available and easily formed, and a model was right in front of the bored soldier.

Beside size, material and context, the form of the object is important.  It can be functional and serve a purpose, or symbolic or decorative.  I was trying to match the lead object to something functional and decorative - a finial, but it turns out, that it was more art and recreation.  I was very fortunate to be able to match it to an item of similar form from seemingly the same location and time period.

Don't be too eager to accept the first answer you get as the end of the matter.  Keep studying.  Keep learning.  What you learn from the process can be enriching and provide valuable information that you will find helpful far into the future.

Report whatever you know about the size, material, context (history of the area and similar find), and form.  Pictures are two dimensional and don't show everything.  Any of that information can help fill out the picture and help you come to a conclusion.

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Start with a quiet time and place.  Maybe before bed or just after awakening. I feel meditation is more productive in the morning because you will be rested and awake.

Focus yourself on why you are there and what you intend to do.

Slow down your thinking and try to deeply relax. But keep your mental focus.

Many people use slow deep breathing to relax.  

Be open to random thoughts but don't try to think about anything.  Just let the thoughts go.

Place the artifact in front of you or hold it in your hand.

Record impressions.  Don't judge or evaluate at this time.

Write or sketch whatever thoughts or visions come you.   Don't write much - just one or two words at a time.  Be more in the visual realm than verbal.

Those are pretty much the steps involved with remote viewing, just adapted to target identification.  I view it as basically a type of limited brainstorming.  Be open to ideas and feelings and perhaps something will strike a chord.  It is supposed to help thinking outside the box.

Give it a try if you are so inclined.  

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Here it goes again.  I'm preparing another obituary for a newly deceased 98-year-old relative.

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Good hunting,

Treasureguide@comcast.net