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Thursday, December 31, 2020

12/31/20 Report - Beach Photos. One Find. Massive Beach Renourishment Coming To Your Favorite Beaches Soon.

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

Unidentified Object Dug From Wreck Beach Wednesday.

Just got this one cleaned up.  I need to inspect it closer for markings.  No threads or any markings noticed so far.  It is hollow and open at both ends.  It is a copper alloy.

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Turtle Trail About Two Hours Before High Tide Wednesday.


Turtle Trail About Two Hours Before High Tide Wednesday.


Square Metal Object That Was Visible Last Year
Reappeared Yesterday South of Seagrap Trail Access.

Thanks to DJ for those photos.

DJ also provided the following important information concerning upcoming beach renourishment projects.

Expect a huge sand renourishment project from Treasure Shores south to Wabasso through March 2021 then in November 2021, Turtle and Seagrape south probably to the beachcomber lane access will receive tons of sand.

Turtle Trail to Golden Sands is scheduled for January to March next year. County engineering says 307,000 cubic yards of beach compatible sand willcome from Stewart Materials in Fort Pierce.

Here are a few more comments on that from DJ.

During 2021-2022 a large sand renourishment project will close some ‘go-to’ treasure beaches in the project areas during the ‘best’ detecting months of Jan-March and November -January over the next two years.

Sector locations are described below and in the map link and plans.

A portion of the sand will be placed from private property (dunes) and seaward to include ‘hard bottom’ area in water although the county does not want to cover ‘hard bottom’ areas as the DEP mitigation costs would be $500,00 per acre. . See page EA page 23 and 2019 plan page 26

The county and FDEP (Florida Department of Environmental Protection) consider all our beaches to be ‘critically eroded’. 15.7 mi of Indian River County’s 22.4 mi shoreline is designated as “ critically eroded” by FDEP.

In the plan linked below are strange comments like this one indicating loss has gone down - but they are still going forward with renourishment (The Countywide annualized shoreline change, from 2013 to 2019, was 0.3 ft/yr, which is less than that of any of the previous time periods)

Beach scraping, (p38 in INDIAN RIVER COUNTY BEACH PRESERVATION PLAN UPDATE 2019 includes a good diagram) is just moving mid beach sand up toward the dunes (to mimic natural beach restoration) and was used in prior years but the new plan recommends against it.

————————Detail links and Resources——————————
This 2019 county update sand plan (copy here:  https://www.ircgov.com/departments/public_works/coastal_engineering_section/Documents/2019_IRC_BPP.pdf ) has disturbing details. Details like costing $28 million over the two years, moving 90,000 cubic yards per year from the inlet to cover north county beaches, ‘hard bottom’ areas that the county wants to cover with sand as part of ‘public safety’ and finally the plan includes covering the dunes in some areas.

Page 58 details plan by sector
2021 Sector 1 and 2 are just south of Sebastian Inlet to Ambersands Beach access. Last year 450,000 cubic yards were taken from the Inlet ‘sand trap’ and placed on these two sectors, inlet to south of Mclarty. Every year 90,000 cu/yds to be added to this area per 2019 updated plan.
This year, 2021, Ambersands will close Jan 4th to Jan 8th.

2021 Sector 3 South of Ambersands to South of Turtle Trail
Jan 1-April 30, 2021 to Wabasso
November to ? 2021 Wabasso to Turtle Trail
470,000 cu yds Per Sector 3 EA plan.

     Sector 4  south of  Turtle Trail almost to Tracking station
Highest annual loss of 1.7 feet per year. No current plans

      Sector 5 Tracking station beach south to Riomar
Was renourished in 2020 155,000 cyds.

    Sector 6 South beach south to Sandy Point
No action recommended since beach accretes. No current plans.

Possibly 2021 Sector 7 Sandy Point area Waiting on easement releases from property owners. County only has 50% easement releases so this will be held up for a while. 470,000 cu yds per Sector 7 EA plan.

       Sector 8 Galleon Drive (private access in Moorings) south to include Round Island park. 
Natural sand accretion (almost 4 feet per year) so no current plans to add sand.


See the sectors on the county map (link  https://ircgis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=516bf562edfa49ab863106a2dac3b673) All sectors are listed for Indian River County. Three sectors comprise the project beginning Jan 4 at Treasure Shores. 

Interesting to note 19 property owners have refused to sign easement release docs that legally prevent sand being brought in on or in front of their property line. 


Thanks for all of that DJ.  

Are your elected officials serving you well?  Let them know what you think.

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We have a more southerly wind today with decreasing surf.

Source: MagicSeaWeed.com.


Happy New Year!
May your beaches not be all sanded in.
TreasureGuide@comcast.net

Wednesday, December 30, 2020

12/30/20 Report - Some Decent Beach Erosion Found Today. The Most Popular Posts and Topics From The Second Half of 2020.

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

John Brooks Beach Early Wednesday Afternoon.

There was a long three to four foot high cut running the length of John Brooks beach this afternoon as low tide approached.

John Brooks Beach Wednesday Afternoon.

There were coins to be found. Quite a few modern coins.  Nothing else other than sinkers and maybe one old find.  I'll have to clean it up to get a better look at it.

Frederick Douglass Beach did not look as good.


Frederick Douglass Beach Wednesday Afternoon.

John Brooks was definitely improved today, but probably not enough.  

I didn't really like the angle of the swells, and don't expect any significant improvement real soon.


Source: MagicSeaWeed.com.


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Yesterday I began a review of the year and pointed out some of the most read posts from the first part of the year.  There were good finds made in January and February and a lot of interest in the storms of July.  I've long said that the November to February months were typically the best for metal detecting the beaches on the Treasure Coast and the review of the year supported that.  Not only were good finds made in the first couple of months of the year, but also October and November, which were both better than December to this point.

As I mentioned yesterday, my review is a little more complicated this year due to the fact that I started a second site in the middle of the year, so ranking the top posts of the year was not as simple and straightforward.  Today I'll look at the most read posts of the new tbr2020 site.

As I said we had good finds in the second half of the year, which included reales and artifacts from the 18th century, but also from the earlier Carlos and Joanna period.  The most viewed post of the second half of the year featured a Carlos and Joanna period ring, as well as an 18th century crucifix and a couple modern gold rings.

Here is the link to the top post of the second half of the year.

Treasure Beaches Report Part 2. 2020 and Beyond: 11/23/20 Report - Recently Found Ring. Gold, Ancient Gold, Depletion Gilding: Encrustation and Discoloring. (tbr2020.blogspot.com)

The second most read post from the second half of the year was also posted in November and mentioned Eta, a late year storm, as well as some finds.  We got some big surf during November.

Here is that link.

Treasure Beaches Report Part 2. 2020 and Beyond: 11/23/20 Report - Recently Found Ring. Gold, Ancient Gold, Depletion Gilding: Encrustation and Discoloring. (tbr2020.blogspot.com)

The third most read post of 2020 was another post from November, which featured news of a shipwreck found on  Crescent Beach and the Mohs scale for identifying metals.

Here is that link.

Treasure Beaches Report Part 2. 2020 and Beyond: 11/23/20 Report - Recently Found Ring. Gold, Ancient Gold, Depletion Gilding: Encrustation and Discoloring. (tbr2020.blogspot.com)

The forth most read post of the second part of the year described silver splash ingots.  At least two of those were found this year.  That is pretty rare.

Here is that link.

Treasure Beaches Report Part 2. 2020 and Beyond: 11/16/20 Report - Silver Splash Ingots and Inspecting Unidentified Metal Lumps. (tbr2020.blogspot.com)

And the fifth most read post of the second part of the year was about the beach closings in August.

That wraps it up.  So overall, as I've said several times, 2020 was a pretty good year for beach metal detecting even though we got no big hits from summer storms.  One thing that was unusual this year is that most years the top posts include some finds from the salvage vessels.  This year it seems the salvage guys decided to be less public about their finds for some reason.

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Happy hunting,

TreasureGuide@comcast.net


Tuesday, December 29, 2020

12/2920 Virtual Tour of Several Treasure Coast Beaches.

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

About a Half Mile South of Sebastian Inlet Tuesday Morning.


I already did my post earlier today reviewing the big events of early the year, but I just go a lot of beach photos from DJ and wanted to go ahead and post them so you could see what it looks like out there.  The photos were taken Tuesday morning, so they are current.

Here they are.


South of Sebastian Inlet Near the Same Spot.


North of the Ambersands Beach Access Tuesday Morning.



South of Ambersands Beach Access Tuesday Morning.



Treasure Shores Tuesday Morning.


DJ saw a sign at Treasure Shores indicating the park will be closed January 4.  Hope they are not dong another beach renourishment already.



Treasure Shores Tuesday Morning.


Wabasso Beach Tuesday Morning.



Wabasso Beach Tuesday Morning.



Turtle Trail Tuesday Morning.



Turtle Trail Tuesday Morning.

Look at those closely.  You can see some clues that might help you determine where you want to go.

Thanks much to DJ.  I hadn't been up to those beaches for a while and am glad to see what they look like.

Happy hunting,
TreasureGuide@comcast.net

12/29/20 Report - Looking Back at Some of the Top Finds and Posts of 2020.

 

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


Fort Pierce South Jetty Park Beach Cam View
Submitted by DJ.

You can see the erosion at Fort Pierce South Jetty Park, which is not at all unusual.  That area often erodes.

You can check areas before going by scanning the beach cams.  

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At the end of the year I look back at the top posts of the year before leaping into the new year.  This year it was a little more difficult for me because I moved the blog from the old treasurebeachereport.blogspot.com site to the new tbr2020.blogspot.com site.  That made it more difficult because the posts from the first part of the year were on one site and the posts from the last few months were on the other site and some posts during the transition were actually on both sites.  As a result I couldn't simply get a list of the top ten posts as I usually do.   As usual old posts continue to be read years after being posted, so the older posts continue to accumulate views and therefore tend to have more views than more recent posts.  That gives older posts an unfair advantage.  

This year I'll break my review of the year into two parts.  Today I'll review the first part of the year and tomorrow I'll review the last few months.  Today I'll discuss January through July.

There were a lot of good old shipwreck finds this year.  As I remembered it, they occurred in the spring and then again in the fall, but actually after looking back at the posts I saw that it was more like January and February and then September and October.

Looking at the most read posts of the year, I see that the majority were posted in  July.  That might seem strange since a lot of good finds were made in January and February and then in September and October, but as you might recall, people were watching the weather closely during the summer because of all the storm activity.  With Covid and everything, I almost forgot about all the summer storms that formed this year.  Many of them ended up going into the Gulf and away from us. 

Somewhat surprisingly, the most read post of the year was the 7/19/20 post, which reported not only a tropical wave but also a backyard meteorite and a fossil tooth find. That post probably received a lot of views because of all the storm activity around that time.  The other topics in that post were not the kind of thing that typically results in so many views.

Here is the link to that post.

The Treasure Beaches Report Direct From Florida's Treasure Coast.: 7/19/20 Report - Unidentified Treasure Coast Fossil Tooth. Historic Backyard Meteorite. Tropical Wave Over Hispaniola.

The second most read blog post was also posted in July, but it also reported on a couple of amazing old finds.  One was made by a lady demonstrating a huge amount of "beginners luck" after inheriting a metal detector and another amazing find by a fellow that found an item years before he found it again in his garage.  Posts reporting on amazing finds naturally get a lot of views.

Here is that link.

The Treasure Beaches Report Direct From Florida's Treasure Coast.: 7/15/20 Report - Beginner's Luck. Old Gold Metal Detector Finds. A Super Answer. The Second 2.5 Million Views.

The third most popular post was posted in February and featured photos of the twenty-two reales found on a Treasure Coast beach by Captain Jonah.   That is really the kind of thing that I expect to get a lot of views, and it did.  Here is the link to that post with all those photos.

The Treasure Beaches Report Direct From Florida's Treasure Coast.: 2/25/20 Report - Twenty-two 1715 Fleet Reales Found on The Treasure Coast On 2/22/20.

The forth most read post of the year featured a couple old coin finds made by Terry S.  They appear to be Carlos and Joanna period coins, which makes them older than the coins being transported as cargo on the 1715 Fleet.  It was quite a year for Treasure Coast finds and more items of that period were found later in the year.

Here is the link to that post.

The Treasure Beaches Report Direct From Florida's Treasure Coast.: 3/7/20 Report - Could This Recent Find Be The Oldest Coin Ever Found On The Treasure Coast? Very Possibly!

The fifth most read post of the year was another post from July reporting primarily on developing beach conditions.

Here is that link.

The Treasure Beaches Report Direct From Florida's Treasure Coast.: 7/18/20 Report - South Hutchinson Island Beaches Somewhat Eroded This Morning. A Product Recommendation.

The sixth most read post year was posted in February and showed a variety of other old shipwreck finds.

Here is that link.

The Treasure Beaches Report Direct From Florida's Treasure Coast.: 2/23/20 Report - Treasure Coin Finds and A Couple Other Recent Finds.

Looking back over the year, you can see that there were some very interesting finds made earlier in the year.  Looking back helps you to learn from the past and put things into perspective.  In 2020 some of the finds in the beginning of the year provided a hint about finds that were made later in the year.  I'll have more about that tomorrow.

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According to MagicSeaWeed we're going to see an increased surf today and tomorrow. 


Source: MagicSeaWeed.com.

Happy hunting,

TreasureGuide@comcast.net



Monday, December 28, 2020

12/28/20 Report - Decision Theory and Game Theory Applied to Metal Detecting: A Very Brief Introduction.

 

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

Surf Predictions.
Source: MagicSeaWeed.com.


We haven't had great beach conditions lately, but we'll be getting some higher surf in a couple of days.  That might help out some, but I'm not expecting a big improvement because of the wind direction, which looks like it will be mostly easterly.  Nonetheless, as I always say, there is always some place to hunt and something to be found.  

At the end of the year I'll look back at what happened this year as well as previous years.  It is always good to look back and see what you can learn from the past.  As I've said before we had some good beach detecting this year, and there were a good number of really good finds.

With metal detecting you are always making decisions.   You have to decide when to go out, what beach to go to, and much more.  Minute by minute you make decisions.   Turn left or turn right.  Dig that signal or not.  And after you dig, the decisions continue.  Clean it or not?  If so, how?  And so on.

There is quite a bit of science to decision theory, which I've briefly introduced before.  Decision theory and game theory, which are used extensively by experts in many fields to improve the decision making process, can be very helpful to the detectorist.  Game theory is not about what we think of as games.  It is about statistical modeling.  You might think of the weather models we talk about when a hurricane is building, but business decisions and engineering problems, as well as many more areas of application such as investing, benefit from game theory.  

Game theory is serious business.  Several Nobel Prizes have been awarded to game theorists, including this year which saw the prize awarded to game theorists in economics.

Game theory is an interdisciplinary approach that draws heavily from psychology and statistics.  I'll only introduce a few things about it, and you can follow up on those topics on your own if you want to.

I talked before about the different types of errors you can make when deciding to dig or not dig a target.  You might remember me mentioning false positives (thinking a signal is good when it turns out to be trash), and false negatives (a good target that you do not dig).  You might also remember how that applies to Covid testing.  Again, there are false positives and false negatives.  In both cases you could apply decision theory to improve the decision making process.

As detectorists, like with the sciences, we operate with a lot of uncertainty.  We can accumulate data, and most of us do that intuitively and informally, but if you apply the science you will become more aware of the errors you might be making and therefore how you might want to adjust your decision making.  I've done posts in the past on the math of metal detecting which explores that kind of thing.

Here are some interesting questions that will help you think about your own decision making process.

1. Would you prefer to take 10 cents or a one in ten chance of getting one dollar.

2. Take $1 or a one in ten chance of getting $10.

3. Take $10 or a one in ten chance of getting $100.

4. Take $100 or a one in ten chance of getting $1000.

5. Take $1000 or a one in then chance of getting $10,000.

6.  Take one million dollars or a one in ten chance of getting ten million dollars.


Psychologists have learned quite a bit about how people make decisions like this.  It is very likely, for example, that you would gamble on a ten percent chance of getting a $100 rather than taking the certain $1, for example.  The risk, or cost, of the gamble is so low as to be relatively unimportant, while the possible reward, is significant enough, even though there is only a ten percent chance, to make most people willing to give up the dollar.

Translate that to digging a signal.  If you are a dig-everything kind of person, you feel the possible reward could be good enough to be worth digging.  You consider things like the time and effort involved in digging, the possible frustration of coming up with another piece of junk and the possibility of getting something good.  You place your own value on each of those things.  To some people digging a piece of junk is no big deal, while to others it is a pain.  As I've explained before, one thing you can gain from digging a piece of junk is information.  It can add to your knowledge of what kind of things might be there.  That information can change your estimates of the probabilities and change your decision making process.  If it is junk, you might be less likely to dig the next borderline signal, but if it is good, you might be more likely to dig the next borderline signal.  The information you gather can help you to change your sense of the type of targets that exist in the area, and if you are using that information, that can change your decision making process.

Going back to the questions -  people will tend to turn down the certain reward for a chance on a bigger reward, but for most rational people, there is a point at which they will take the certain reward rather than a chance on the bigger reward.   Unless you are a real risk taker or are very wealthy, you would probably take a sure million rather than a 10% chance of getting ten million.  The richer you are, the more willing you will be to gamble for higher stakes.  Your own decision process will depend upon your own situation and view of the world.  You will make better decisions when your internal model of the world is more accurate. 

Some kinds of targets require a certain type of person.  If you don't have much patience or risk-tolerance, that will affect your hunting style.

Some detectorists start out with visions of gold hoards in their head.  That is OK, if you can keep at it for what is likely to take a long time to achieve.  If you enjoy the process or are able to make other finds that keep you motivated while searching for the big one, that will help you keep going.  People who do not simply enjoy the activity of metal detecting will probably give up the hobby before long if they don't have some short term success.  

Different people make decisions differently.  They have their own operating characteristics.  There are people who are adverse to risk, for example, while there are other people will take a lot of risk and go to great lengths to pursue a large payout even if it there is a low probability success. 

Metal detecting involves dealing with a lot of uncertainty.   You never find out what you missed.  You don't have complete information of the situation.   That is one reason I often like to check myself.  You might think you did well even though you missed the really good treasures by inches or feet.  

You are working with a lot of unknowns, but you can model situations and think about different decision strategies and the possible outcomes.  People do that informally to some extent, but you can sample areas, quantify things, and construct your own probabilistic models.  You probably do that intuitively to some extent, but you can quantify things and gain a better understanding of the likely effect of different decisions.

Are you a person that wants to find something every time you go metal detecting and get very discouraged when you hunt for hours with nothing to show for it?  If so, you might not be the type of person to set your sites on a low-probability long-term hunt even if the payout could be big.  Not everyone is optimistic enough to hunt for many years for a wreck like the Atocha.  They simply do not have the optimism of a Mel Fisher.  It didn't hurt, of course, that he found plenty of other treasure before finding the Atocha.  You can express that in terms of reinforcement or reward.  Some level of success is necessary to keep most people going.  Some people need more frequent rewards than others, and some people need larger rewards than others to continue the search.  Know yourself and set your goals accordingly.   

Here are just a couple of the decision strategies that psychologists have identified.  There is the strategy that theorists and academics call the minimax.  The minimax strategy is a strategy that minimizes the maximum negative outcome.  This strategy would be chosen by people that will not take gambles.  They want to minimize the worst possible outcome.   If you translate that to the lottery, they rather spend a small amount (little to lose) even if they have a small chance of winning.  They want to limit their losses.   

Another strategy would be the maximax strategy, which would be used by people who are aggressive and willing to take big risks for big rewards.  They are willing to take a long shot if there is a chance of a big reward.  

There are a variety additional of different strategies, but I hope you get the idea from those two. 

If you want to be more aware of how you make decisions and learn to make decisions more effectively, you might want to study game theory and decision theory.  I know I didn't do a great job of presenting this, but I wanted to introduce a few topics to give those of you who want to pursue it, some direction.  It is a huge topic and I only had a few minutes to introduce it, even though I have referred to it a little from time to time in the past.    

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You know how they say one man's trash is another man's treasure.  I think the following is more accurate.  One man's treasure is his wife's trash.

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By the way, St. Lucie County now has over 100 reported Covid hospitalized patients, which is very high.  A few months ago it was only 40.  

I don't know how valid or accurate those statistics are, but it doesn't sound good.  Beware.  

Funny thing is some of those government officials who mandated masks and lockdowns have contracted the virus.  Don't know if they were not taking there own advice, like so many we know of, or if they were taking the precautions and they weren't effective.

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In the next couple of days I'll take a look back at the year and some previous years.

Happy hunting,
Treasureguide@comcast.net

Saturday, December 26, 2020

12/26/20 Report - Bigger Surf Predicted for Next Week. Blown Bottle Find. Reconstructing Facial Features of Ancient People.

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


Current Surf Predictions For the Fort Pierce Area.
Source: MagicSeaWeed.com

This wasn't a bad year for metal detecting on the Treasure Coast.  We had some excellent hunting back in the spring and then again in September and October.  

You always have to stay alert because you don't want to miss those rare times when the opportunities are the best.  As I've often said, there is always some place to hunt and something to find, but sometimes are definitely more productive than others.  We can't use heavy equipment to move the beach, so we just have to wait for nature to help us.

There are always some spots worth detecting, its just that there won't be as many good spots and they won't be as large.  They are just harder to find and need to be worked more skillfully.

When you get a six foot surf that is sometimes enough to help, depending of course on other factors such as the angles and the previous condition of the beach.  

As my success formula shows, the time you spend on-task is one of the most important factors in determining your success.  When finds are hard to come by, it takes more time, but eventually it will pay off.  Things sometimes show up in the most surprising places.


Detectorist On Sebastian Beach Cam.
Submitted by Jammin Jack.

Jammin Jack frequently checks the Sebastian Beach Cam and caught this detectorist at work.

I took a little walk today looking for bottles.  I found a few older stopper-top bottles.  I found one old Fort Pierce Coca Cola soda water bottle, but it was broken at the neck.  I've found and sold a few of those in the past.  Too bad this one was broken.

I also found a nice hand-blown bottle.  I didn't have any embossing or anything.  It has a very nice pleasing shape.  It also has a lot of big bubbles, but no embossing or anything like that.

Hand-Blown Bottle Find.

In the following picture you can see some of the long bubbles in the neck that shows how the glass flowed.

Neck of Same Bottle Shown Above.

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Science, Art Combine to Reveal Face of Ancient Peruvian Noblewoman...

Below is the reconstruction.


Peruvian Woman Buried Some 3,700 Years Ago.
Source Latin American Herald Tribune.


Looks very good for being that old - if that is what she really looked like.

Some of the current TV celebrities have had so much plastic surgery that they will probably look that young even if they lived another thousand years.  I think Marie Osmond looks younger than she did 50 years ago.

Here is the link for more about the reconstruction.


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I'm hoping we get some bigger surf and another good shot at some old stuff before the year closes.

Happy hunting,

TreasureGuide@comcast.net


Friday, December 25, 2020

12/25/20 Report - Million Dollars Gold Coins Found. Beaches Christmas Morning. Coming Higher Surf.

 

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



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This morning I decided to go to the beach to see if there were any reindeer tracks in the sand.  I didn't see any, but the wind was whipping pretty good and it was chilly.  At first the waves were hitting from a good northerly angle, but on the South Hutchinson Island beaches I didn't see any cuts.  Here is what I saw at John Brooks.


John Brooks Beach Christmas Morning A Little Before Low Tide.


Normally I would have done at least a little checking with the metal detector, but this morning I had a lot of Christmas activities on my mind, so under the circumstances I skipped it.


John Brooks Beach Christmas Morning.


And here is what Walton Rocks looked like.


Wlaton Rocks Beach Christmas Morning.


Walton Rocks Beach Christmas Morning.

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A bird watcher found over $1 million of ancient gold coins.  Here is how he described the find.

“That evening I was doing a bit of bird-watching,” he said. “After watching a dogfight between a buzzard and a pair of magpies, I stared down and spotted something lying in a bit of the deep ploughed soil which ran around the edge of the field.”

He nearly passed it, thinking the metal chip was an old washer. Then he “rubbed it and felt its thickness.”

“I saw the glint of gold and realized it was a beautiful Celtic gold stater, which made me sit down in sheer shock,” he said. “I then spotted the second coin two feet away and rushed home to get my [metal detector].” It gave him a “really strong” signal that more was just below the surface.

After about 18 inches of digging, he unearthed a copper bangle — likely the handle of a pitcher of gold coins. “Gently,” he lifted the vessel and out came a “cascade” of gold — “a vision which will remain with me for the rest of my life,” he recalled. “I had to sit down to get my breath back. I had only come out for a walk and found a Celtic hoard.”

Here is the link for the rest of the story.

Birdwatcher discovers $1M worth of ancient Celtic gold coins (nypost.com)

Thanks to Dean R. for that link.

The find was reported in the November 2020 issue of Treasure Hunting Magazine, described as  Britain's best selling metal detecting magazine.

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Right now the wind is N/NW and the surf is around two or three feet.  The tides are small today, but it looks like next week we might get some higher surf. 

 

Source: MagicSeaWeed.com.

Christmas Blessing to All,

TreasureGuide@comcast.net


Thursday, December 24, 2020

12/24/20 Report - The History of Christmas Cards. Treasure Coast Wind Conditions Changing.

 

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

Circa 1909 Christmas Post Card.


The post card shown above was to Earl Mounts from grandma Dietiker, who promised to send young Earl "a new pair of leggons to wear to church."

My mind is very much on Christmas today.

I found the following history of the first Christmas card.

Henry Cole (1808 – 1882) was a prominent civil-servant, educator, inventor and the first director of the V&A. In the 1840s, he was instrumental in reforming the British postal system, helping to set up the Uniform Penny Post which encouraged the sending of seasonal greetings on decorated letterheads and visiting cards. Christmas was a busy time in the Cole household and with unanswered mail piling up, a timesaving solution was needed. Henry turned to his friend, artist John Callcott Horsley to illustrate his idea.

Here is the link for more about that

V&A · The First Christmas Card (vam.ac.uk)

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While Cole and Horsley get the credit for the first, it took several decades for the Christmas card to really catch on, both in Great Britain and the United States. Once it did, it became an integral part of our holiday celebrations—even as the definition of “the holidays” became more expansive, and now includes not just Christmas and New Year’s, but Hanukkah, Kwanzaa and the Winter Solstice.

Louis Prang, a Prussian immigrant with a print shop near Boston, is credited with creating the first Christmas card originating in the United States in 1875. It was very different from Cole and Horsley’s of 30 years prior, in that it didn’t even contain a Christmas or holiday image. The card was a painting of a flower, and it read “Merry Christmas.” This more artistic, subtle approach would categorize this first generation of American Christmas cards.  “They were vivid, beautiful reproductions,” says Collins. “There were very few nativity scenes or depictions of holiday celebrations. You were typically looking at animals, nature, scenes that could have taken place in October or February.” ...

The modern Christmas card industry arguably began in 1915, when a Kansas City-based fledgling postcard printing company started by Joyce Hall, later to be joined by his brothers Rollie and William, published its first holiday card. The Hall Brothers company (which, a decade later, change its name to Hallmark), soon adapted a new format for the cards—4 inches wide, 6 inches high, folded once, and inserted in an envelope.  

“They discovered that people didn’t have enough room to write everything they wanted to say on a post card,” says Steve Doyal, vice president of public affairs for Hallmark, “but they didn’t want to write a whole letter.”

And here is the link for the rest of that article.

The History of the Christmas Card | History | Smithsonian Magazine

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Today we're getting a southwest wind.  Tomorrow it will be more northwest and then Saturday, north.

Wind Speed and Direction Thursday Afternoon.
Source: Ventusky.com


Predicted Wind Speed and Direction Saturday.
Source: Ventusky.com



The tides are pretty flat now.  We might get an increase in the surf by Wednesday.  Unfortunately by then the winds will be east and south.



I'm more into Christmas today, as you can tell.

There are those who want to eliminate our churches and traditional holidays, but I think those who are using fear and misinformation for that purpose will be very disappointed when they learn that a more spiritual, deep and meaningful Christmas is the result for believers.

And the light shineth in darkness; and the darkness comprehended it not (John 1:5).

Christmas blessings to all.
TreasureGuide@comcast.net

Wednesday, December 23, 2020

12/23/20 Report - The Christmas Star and the Archaeology of Christmas. Christ Coins and Finds.

 

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

Conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn.
Submitted by Alberto.


Maybe you've heard about the Christmas star, which is what some are calling the recent conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn, which occurred on the 21st of December.  Maybe it was the Christmas star referred to in the Bible, but I doubt it.  In any case, the conjunction is something to see and can be viewed to some extent with the naked eye, but to see details a decent telescope will help.

Above is a photo of the conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn..  If you look closely, although it is difficult, you can see some of the moons around Jupiter and rings around Saturn.

Thanks to Alberto for sending me that photo.

Here is a link where you can learn more about that.

“Christmas Star:” Saturn-Jupiter Great Conjunction 2020 (timeanddate.com)


By the way, the New Testament Greek word translated star, according to the Complete New Testament Word Study Dictionary, could also refer to other luminous heavenly bodies besides those that we now classify as stars. 

In 1614 Johannes Kepler suggested the conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn that occurred in 7 B.C.  as the Christmas star.

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If you've been metal detecting very long you probably made some nice Christmas finds.  Maybe they weren't made on Christmas Day, but close enough.

JamminJack sent me this one.




Here is what Jack said about that.

Used to spend XMas on the Treasure Coast...how times fly!

Looking for some images of past XMas finds by me or friends to send you before Christmas.

Christmas is celebrating the most important event which occurred two thousands years, ago! Rare to see anyone other than a church goer mention it is a religious holiday.

Covid 19 could be seen as one of the true signs that Christ will return, or second coming. This global disaster is in Revelations. Try telling anyone, and they will call you nuts!!

Also, nothing wrong with finding something good on Christmas. When I found something good I would look up and say thank you.

If I remember, this was found towards end of the year. Carlos II coins and the cross were found in what was probably a leather pouch near Treasure Shore, which was also believed to be an extended campsite for the survivors.

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Just a note on the use of XMas as short for Christmas. Some don't like that usage because they think it removes "Christ" from Christmas, however some, including myself, consider the X in the abbreviation to be a Greek Chi rather than an English X.  You can see one of those in the christogram shown below.

Chi Rho

Chi Rho
The Chi Rho is one of the earliest forms of christogram, formed by superimposing the first two letters—chi and rho—of the Greek word ΧΡΙΣΤΟΣ in such a way that the vertical stroke of the rho intersects the center of the chi.

Christos would be my Anglicized pronunciation of the Greek word shown in red above.  

You might also enjoy this article entitled The Bible Archaeology of Christmas, which gives the archaeological evidence of many of the Christian beliefs concerning Christmas.

Here is the link.


Very good article.

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While I'm on this topic, here is an article showing ancient coins depicting Jesus Christ.



Here is the link.


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The wind is now from the southeast.  The primary swell is E/NE, and the surf will be running 2 - 3 feet most of the week.

Happy hunting,
Treasureguide@comcast.net



Tuesday, December 22, 2020

12/22/20 Report - Seagrape Trail Access Being Rebuilt. 1000-Year-Old Cross Cleaned. Shipwreck With Elephant Tusk Cargo.

 


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

1000-Year-Old Cross Before and After Cleaning.
Source: See link below.


In 2014, amateur treasure hunter Derek McLennan was scouring a field in southwestern Scotland when he unearthed what appeared to be a bit of silver decorated with an Anglo-Saxon design.

“I went into shock, endorphins flooded my system and away I went stumbling towards my colleagues waving it in the air,” the retired businessman told BBC News at the time.

As it turns out, the rare artifact that caught McLennan’s eye was just the tip of an archaeological iceberg: He and two friends had stumbled onto a hoard of more than 100 gold and silver objects—one of the biggest troves of Viking-era artifacts ever found in the United Kingdom.

National Museums Scotland acquired the Galloway Hoard, as it came to be known, in 2017. Since then, conservators have been working to clean and restore the items, all of which spent more than 1,000 years buried in the Scottish field. This week, the National Museum of Scotland (NMS) released new images of the latest object to undergo conservation: an intricately decorated Anglo-Saxon cross...

Here is the link for more about that.



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As you probably know, the Seagrape Trail beach access has been closed for months.  It is being rebuilt though (See below.).


Construction At Seagrape Trail Beach Access.
Photo by DJ.

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Yesterday I mentioned finds sometimes being made many years after they were lost.  That reminded William P. of one find he made.  Here is how he told it.

Your post today reminded me of 2 events years apart involving an awesome chain and pendant. I would say probably 25 years ago I was a newbie to detecting, I was on a beach detecting a the dry sand. The machine was a Compass land machine. After a couple hours a young came running up to me asking to find his 30" long 18K chain with a large marlin pendant attached. The marlin had ruby eyes. He described it very well. He was very disappointed when I told him my detector was not a water machine.

The spot was in very close proximity to a fishing pier so I knew pretty much the area it was in. It wasn't till years later I started water hunting but never thought about that chain again.
One day probably 10 or 12 years later, I was in the same area with a hunting buddy and low and behold he pulls up the same chain and pendant. You could have knocked me over with a feather. I related the story and that was the end of that. The current was really running that day and a ton of sand was moving... large shells and rocks were exposed. We found several nice gold items that day but I doubt the chain story could be topped for me. Bill P.

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Researchers have examined ancient DNA preserved in elephant tusks that were among the cargo of a 487-year-old shipwreck.

Their forensic examination of the 100 tusks pinpointed the devastation caused to the elephant population by centuries of ivory trade.

On this single ship, researchers found genetic evidence of 17 distinct herds of the threatened animals.

Today, scientists can find only four of those herds surviving in Africa.

The tusks were so well preserved - in cold water off the Namibian coast - that scientists were even able to find out what type of diet the elephants had, which revealed where they had lived and been hunted...


Here is that link.

Ivory: Elephant decline revealed by shipwreck cargo - BBC News

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We're getting some north winds and northeast swells today but not much surf.  The surf is only about two or three feet, and the tides are pretty flat.

Happy hunting,

TreasureGuide@comcast.net