How Metal Detectors Work & Other Good Things to Know

Links No Comments »

We just realized that one of our sponsors, Kellyco, hosts a couple of other services for metal detectorists. Check these out when you get a chance!

HowMetalDetectorsWork.com: Created with metal detectorists in mind, this website features articles on Electro Magnetic Field Generation, the history of metal detectors, a buyers guide and field test reports. It’s an excellent resource - bookmark it and go back often.

MetalDetectorManuals.com: This site provides manuals for anyone to download or view with Adobe Acrobat - For FREE! This is a great site to reference if you don’t want to flip through the pages of your manual; just “Ctrl+F” and search for the term you need to know about! Manuals for Garrett, Minelab, Bounty Hunter, Detector Pro, Fisher, Cobra, Lorenz, OKM, Predator, Viper, White’s and MP series are all there.

Enjoy these websites folks. Hope you find them as useful as we do.

- Shaun

The World of Metal Detecting - Others Are Catching On!

Links 1 Comment »

It looks like others are catching on to our favorite hobby. With the price of gold and other metals increasing to the highest levels ever recorded, it should come as no surprise. But what is a surprise is the amount of media attention metal detecting is suddenly getting.

I found an article in Smart Money Magazine Online titled “Welcome to the World of Metal Detecting.” It’s two pages long and features a quote by our sponsor Kellyco Metal Detector’s founder and CEO, Stuart Auerbach: “Stuart Auerbach, founder of Kellyco, the nation’s largest metal-detector store, with $15million in revenue, estimates a 50% increase since 2002″ [in metal detector sales].

The article goes on to describe some of the hard-core treasure hunters who “who drive to the shore in hurricanes just for the chance to hunt a beach swept clear of the top layer of sand — they tether themselves to their cars when the wind blows hard.”

It also mentions a popular hunt we’ve heard a lot about - DIV (Diggin’ in Virginia): “Relic hunters who specialize in historic sites attend national gatherings like the annual sellout “Diggin’ in Virginia” convention, where hundreds spend the weekend combing a rented field for Civil War artifacts; teams sponsored by detector manufacturers compete to uncover the most eye-popping finds and win cash prizes.”

Perhaps most interesting is that, while the author of this article is no metal detectorist, she knows of the on-going feud between archaeologists and metal detectorists.

“While most detectorists say they dig on private property only with the owner’s permission, some accuse them of messing with historic areas and pocketing materials that belong in museums; some towns have passed laws banning the use of metal detectors on public property.”

This is a common disagreement between the two groups and one I encourage us to overcome by documenting our finds and sharing them with local museums whenever possible.

Check out the entire article at SmartMoney.com and get ready to share your hobby with a lot of other folks! It looks like the rest of the world is finally catching on to ours!

- Shaun

33,000 Miles of Shoreline Cleaned - 5,000 Trash Bags Filled

Environment No Comments »

This article really warms my heart and hits close to home for any beach-combers.

Volunteers scoured 33,000 miles of shoreline worldwide - 90 miles in Brevard County, Florida alone - and picked up more than 6 million pounds of trash and debris that were harmful to seabirds and marine mammals.

In Brevard county alone 5,188 bags of trash (about 103,000lbs!) were collected by over 2,000 “Keep Brevard Beautiful” volunteers.

“The debris ranges from the relatively harmless, although annoying and an eyesore, to items that annually result in the death of hundreds of thousands of seabirds and marine mammals caught in abandoned fishing lines and netting.

A third of the items found came from smokers. The volunteers collected and cataloged nearly 2.3 million cigarette butts, filters and cigar tips.

In all, 57 percent of the trash was related to shoreline recreational activities, 33 percent from smoking-related activities, 6.3 percent from fishing or waterway activities, 2 percent from dumping, and less than 1 percent from medical and personal hygiene activities, said the report.”

What the report DOES NOT mention is the hundreds of metal detectorists who scour Florida beaches year-round! But I wanted to take a moment and say “Thank You!” to all of those beach combers who, I know, pick up trash and clean the beaches as they search for lost treasures.

Spring is here and the beaches are packed, so good luck out there!

~ Liz ~

Minelab’s new GPX-4500 Metal Detector - WOW!

Metal Detector Reviews 1 Comment »

Kellyco just gave us gold seekers some great new!

Minelab has updated their phenomenal GPX-4000 Gold Detector with a new technology known as “SETA” (stands for Smart Electronic Timing Alignment), and issued an entirely new machine - the GPX-4500!

The GPX-4000 has long been considered a MUST have for serious gold seekers around the world, so it should come as no surprise that the GPX-4500 will be much sought after. Check out Kellyco’s GPX-4500 Information Page to read more details about the detector or give them a call to pre-order one. Apparently this machine is already so popular that it’s selling out! Here’s a little bit of the information from the Kellyco website:

“The GPX-4500, like its predecessor, is the ultimate gold detector and has added features that make it more versatile than ever before.

GPX-4500Minelab created an entirely new class of gold detectors with the GPX-4000, unlike anything the industry had seen before. The GPX-4500 takes that ground breaking technology even further with all new SETA technology that is quieter and more immune to interference.

SETA stands for “Smart Electronic Timing Alignment” and is what brings a total of six timing options to the GPX-4500. Each timing option is suited to different detecting conditions and allows you to automatically set a precise alignment for each of the six options. Noises that are caused by magnetic interference are minimized in each of the six timing options, which provides a more stable threshold and reduces signals from highly magnetic (hot) rocks.

Each timing option can be independently operated adjusted and operated for more efficiency – alerting you to the smallest, most deeply buried nuggets.

The best part is that the GPX-4500 is still a “Multi-Period Pulse Induction” metal detector and combined with the new SETA technology, this machine is stronger and more versatile than any other. Improved features include quieter operation, louder target signals, improved discrimination, automatic functions and pre-set search modes.”

Roman Relics “Lost” & Retrieved

History No Comments »

About 1,000 ancient Roman relics were discovered in the country home of a wealthy engineer who lived just outside of Rome. The relics were traced by archaeologists to one of Emperor Trajan’s first century villas.

Roman Empire - 117 ADTo give you a little perspective on that, Emperor Trajan ruled from the year 98 A.D., to 117 A.D. He’s best known for his extensive public building program, which reshaped the city of Rome and left multiple enduring landmarks such as Trajan’s Forum, Trajan’s Market and Trajan’s Column. His legacy as a Roman emperor is comparable only to that of Augustus Caesar - who I’m sure you’ve heard of. Check out the map on the left to see exactly how extensive the Roman Empire became under his rule.

In fact, every new emperor after Trajan was honored by the Senate with the prayer “felicior Augusto, melior Traiano,” meaning “may he be luckier than Augustus and better than Trajan”.

Trajan’s CoinThe relics that were recovered were being used as decorations in the engineer’s weekend residence, and they came from the walls of Trajan’s hunting retreat in Arcinazzo Romano.

The raid that revealed the relics took place more than a year ago and just became public this March.

Just more proof that every relic founds teaches us a little bit more about history. Hope ya’ll enjoyed the lesson.

- Shaun

450 Silver Coin Cache Discovered in Sweden

Finds No Comments »

Talk about a cache!

A ‘unique silver treasure has been uncovered near Sweden’s Arlanda airport.’

Silver Coins Found in SwedenOn Tuesday, archaeologists from the Swedish National Heritage Board dug up the largest collection of Viking-era silver coins found north of Stockholm in ‘modern times.’

The cache consists of 450 silver coins and was discovered during an investigation of an Iron Age grave site. But the coolest part is that not all of the coins are from the area.

Many of them come from Baghdad and Damascus, and are thought to be from 500 to 840 AD. They appear to have been buried around 850 AD and were found on the edge of a grave which is believed to be about 1,000 years older than the treasure itself!

“This shows that the people who lived at the site had distant contacts” said archaeologist Karin Beckman-Thoor.

Meanwhile, a medieval silver ring, thought to be from the 13th or 14th centuries, was found earlier this year in the U.K. and has been officially declared as treasure by the British Museum. It was found with a metal detector by Ruth Cattermole from London. The ring was believed to have properties which protect against fever and is made of about 10% precious metals.

This just goes to show that there is still plenty of treasure to be found all over the world! So get out there and metal detect!

~ Liz ~

Win a White’s DFX E Series Metal Detector from Kellyco Metal Detectors

Metal Detector Reviews, Links 2 Comments »

We’ve known about this contest for a couple of weeks now, but we just got clearance to post about it here, on TreasureHunting.com.

Kellyco is hosting a “Raves & Reviews” Contest to win up to 10 prizes! And yes, you can enter more than once!

Win These Prizes!The Grand Prize winner will receive a White’s DFX E Series Metal Detector with a White’s padded, gun-style carrying bag, a White’s Bullseye II pinpointer, and a pair of White’s E Series 900 Headphones - a package valued at $1,369.80!

The Second Prize is a $500.00 Kellyco Gift Card to use on any metal detector or accessories they carry on their website.

The Third Prize is a $250.00 Kellyco Gift Card to use, again on any metal detector or accessory that they carry on their website.

And seven other winners will receive an Automax V4 Pinpointer, valued at $139.00 each!

All you have to do is write a review about your metal detector. As they say “it’s easy to enter, open to everyone, and all it takes is writing about your favorite metal detector!”

See The Raves & Reviews Contest Page to enter this contest once for each metal detector you’ve used or owned!

We’ve already entered, but good luck and happy hunting!

- Shaun and Adam in St. Cloud

Vintage Civil War Photograph Exhibit - Columbia, S.C.

Photos, Events No Comments »

Fifty remarkable, vintage images from the Civil War era are on display at the South Caroline Confederate Relic Room & Military Museum.

On loan from the David L. Hack Collection of the Chrysler Museum of Art in Norfolk, Va., “these are some of the most powerful and well-known photographs in our nationa’s history.” Relic Room director Allen Roberson says “The images are stark, human and unforgettable.”

So exactly what are these vintage photographs of?

One of the most piercing photographs is of President Abraham Lincoln, taken only 11 days before he delivered the Gettysburg Address.

President Lincoln and his son.There’s also a series of eight vintage Gardner prints of the hanging of the conspirators in the Lincoln assassination - the only photographs taken of the event. They even include a 3-D stereoscopic image of the hangings, which came just three months after Lincoln was killed.

Other photographs include one of General Robert E. Lee in the uniform he wore at the surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia at Appomattox Courthouse. Wearing the uniform was a violation of the terms of his surrender, but he wore it anyway.

Check out the events and exhibits at the South Carolina Confederate Relic Room & Military Museum website. You can also take a virtual tour online. The exhibit closes June 28, 2008, so if you’re in the area this summer please be sure to stop by!

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