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Ever wondered what treasures might lie hidden right
beneath your feet...old coins or items lost long ago, just waiting to be picked
up by someone like you? Can you just imagine the thrill of being the first
person to handle something that was last in the hands of someone perhaps
hundreds of years ago? Metal detecting is a truly fascinating and rewarding
hobby that brings alive the past like no other hobby can.
So if you have decided to try metal detecting, and if you're shopping around for Metal Detect
information and advice, it's a good idea to begin your research by checking out prices from
leading detector retailers like those listed on this page. You will find they
should also be able to let you have a field test report too, which is also
useful in helping you decide which is the right metal detector for you.
Metal detecting is probably the most rewarding hobby
you could ever imagine. It provides the thrill of finding coin or metal
artefacts with your metal detector, and you may well be the first person to
handle them for many years. This joy is hard to describe. The individual who
abandoned or lost it would have had no idea of our present world, and that one
day it would be found again. Metal detecting also provides education, as
researching the history of any finds demands some study.
Every day many
valuable metal objects are located by metal detector users and most of these
items would have been lost for ever if it were not for metal detectorists.
Industrial & Security Metal Detectors 107
Coins - A Key To The MindThe metal detecting hobby has expanded my interest in coins and enhanced my understanding of many cultures as coins are truly keys to the mind. Robert Carson of the British Museum said, "It is beyond doubt that in coins lies a treasure which offers almost the only chance of penetrating the darkness that still envelops so much of history."Having found many Chinese, Hebrew, Roman, Greek, British, Canadian and Spanish coins with metal detectors in 39 years, I am intrigued and fascinated by the stories that coins tell. For example, the Hebrew coins did not have portraits on them. Why? The Ten Commandments forbid making graven images and the coins of the Hebrew people were minted under priestly leadership. Wars, bloodshed, infamous persons, triumphs and great accomplishments are all told about in coins. From Alexander The Great's Triumphs; the wiles of the beautiful and powerful Cleopatra; the widow's mites made famous by Jesus; the expansive Roman and Greek Empire's many rulers; the fascinating coins of England, France, Spain in building colonial empires during many centuries; and yes the vast coins of many countries in the 20th century, all serve to make coins keys to the mind.What a history book coins are. Every time I check my coin finds and see a new 50 States Quarter, I get excited over what the people of that state deems important enough to say this is us. History and geography teachers could spend many days with a set of these coins and teach many lessons about the culture, economy and history of each state.In the Fall of 1978, I found a Hebrew coin of the third year of the Jewish War against Rome (69 AD), on a vacant lot that housed a school from 1917 to 1964. I now have several hundred Biblical coins in my collection, and a wonderful book by David Hendin, "Guide to Biblical Coins", to teach me about these ancient coins. A Spanish 8 Reales coin dated 1796, a shipwreck find, got me into the subject of counterfeiting. It is a real nice coin of that year, made by a sailor of pewter instead of silver and is more valuable than a real coin of that year because of its rarity. I found a real 8 Reales coin dated 1793 at the same site.Living in Florida is living in a coin collector's paradise. Vacationers from all over the world have lost their coins and I am blessed in finding my share. I have more than 100 different date coins from other countries (predating 1950) found with metal detectors, and for the most part, they were lost by tourists who started coming here in the early 1900's. I now know what a Florin, a Ore, a Mark, a Centavo, a Ducat, a Shilling, A Ruble and many other coins are. A wealth of new information is mine because of these finds.I have a passion for coin collecting that metal detecting has impacted so much. The beauty of a coin is not just in its design, its shape, or its value as a precious metal, but in in what it teaches. Let coins become a key to your mind!
When you are using
your metal detector and you hear that familiar sound from your metal detector
telling you that a metal object has been detected, you have no idea what it
might be until you have uncovered it. In some respects metal detecting is a
little like fishing as you do not know what you have caught until it comes out
of the water. The suspense is electric as you take it from the ground. Is it an
old coin, a bronze axe, or perhaps a ring? Is it made of silver, or even gold?
If it is a coin is it part of a hoard buried to be hidden from view and will
there be more of them in the vicinity?
As you see the joys and rewards of metal detecting are very real. You should
perhaps consider joining the many detectorists who conduct their hobby as a
rewarding pastime. A metal detector for a newbie is not too expensive. There are
also metal detecting clubs near you where you can get information and help from
other metal detecting converts. Most metal detecting clubs also offer field
trips and rallies.
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