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Replies: 40 / Views: 3,187 |
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Valued Member
United Kingdom
477 Posts |
Ah those were the references you were looking for, I thought you were trying to translate the ancient language on the obverse  I even tried to but it's a bit out of my depth, emphasis on 'bit'.
Edited by awallin01 03/31/2014 12:27 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4981 Posts |
 what a great find. I don't know if it was planted or not...i prefer FR's cheapie coin purchased by someone not really all that intersted in ancients and lost. if it was planted, I sure as heck wish these people come plants some tets in my yard.
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New Member
 United States
14 Posts |
Thanks for all the input guys. After my first reply asking if the coin smells like olives I wasnt sure if I was gonna get anywhere, but I appreciate all the help that came in after, lol.
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New Member
 United States
14 Posts |
So thanks to you guys I know definitively what coin it is. I know they are not worth much so will just pass it down to my son along with my collection, but judging by the photos what condition would you call it?
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Pillar of the Community
United Kingdom
4208 Posts |
Definitely worth more as a family piece than just as money (these sell for £5-10, up to £20 if someone takes a shine to it).
The conditiono f roman coins is...well, hard to pin down. There are many variables, from strike to surface and alloy to design. Overall, id grade this Fine (in the English grading scale). I dont know how that translates into the Sheldon Scale.
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Pillar of the Community
United Kingdom
1569 Posts |
Nice coin. already been ided so nothing much to add there. I have a fair few of this type now, I posted one a while back and got all the info passed onto me to id them. The value varies quite a bit, I have sold 4 in the past few months and they sold for between 18 GBP up to 32 GBP., no idea what made the price difference, a gap in a collection maybe. Just out of curiosity, you didn't happen to find any old lead fragments round and about this did you? The ones that have the 'white' look?
You will never soar like an eagle if you hang around with turkeys.....
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New Member
 United States
14 Posts |
Ya know Mel, I honestly dont remember. This was over 15 years ago and I was merely a young teenage assistant to my father who was an avid amateur treasure hunter. That sounds like something we could have easily dismissed though, we often found "junk" metals in between real finds....may I ask why the specific interest in whitish lead?
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Pillar of the Community
United Kingdom
1569 Posts |
Just a curiosity thing. Had a few met buddies find items in places they should not be so did a little research into why. A lot of the beach found stuff came from collapsed dunes and such and many had small fragments of lead near the find. Obviously, the old dry sand dunes have little impact on the state of the coin as the salt content and other are exempt. But what is of interest is the way that many items such as yours are found many miles from any connection but always get disregarded just simply because records suggest these things never got to these places. Looking at it, it is not something that you would say has been sat in a sandy, beach type location for years, However I have seen coins pulled from dune sand that have had little or no effect from the sea or weather. The coin is probably a drop from a careless past collector, but non the less, well worth recording the find in the correct way. Its easy for us all to say its planted, or whatever, but sometimes even the 'experts' (that rely on sketchy writings at best) admit the expanse of the Roman empire could by far stretch way beyond our knowledge. Nice coin and nice find 
You will never soar like an eagle if you hang around with turkeys.....
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New Member
 United States
14 Posts |
Thanks met. I am extremely interested in pre-columbian travel to north america and have always believed that ancient people such as vikings and maybe even other european people, if you buy into such legends, such as romans and the highly mysterious groups that disappeared off the face of the planet like the knights of the templar and lost tribes of israel. That stuff fascinates me. What would you consider recording it in the right way? I have emailed harvards history department and received no reply and not sure who else I would tell.
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Moderator
 United States
23731 Posts |
In Yarmouth, MA there is a large rock in the middle of Bass River that has ancient Runes carved in it. I've seen them myself. It's rumored that the Vikings lead by Lef Ericson sailed up the river and the Runes where left there by his party. No other evidence exists other than it was known the Lef did reach the shores of North America. Makes for and interesting story though.
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Replies: 40 / Views: 3,187 |