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How old could this stuff really be?

KnightRider

New member
I love relic hunting and actually bought my Ace 250 just to be able to do it. I was thinking one day, how long can iron sit in the ground before it does rust away? I am guessing that since there is a lack of oxygen below the surface it is probably preserved a very long time. Can someone give me an idea of how long some common items like maybe nails can really sit in the ground before rusting away to nothing?
 
:usaflag:I have found handmade square-head nails. Around here they usually date back to the late 1800's. And another factor I think, is where they are buried and how much moisture the area gets.
 
I spent the last three weeks digging sqaure nails and iron spikes at the san jacinto battlefield on the TX gulf coast. Its humid and basically a swamp but they are in decent shape and from april 1836.
 
and btw just in case someone in my area gets the wrong idea this was on an archeological dig, not relic hunting.
 
I've found some Roman nails before - totally ferrous and dating to 200-400 AD. They were pretty knackered, but no different to some 100/200/300 year old nails I find sometimes, irritating and garbage! Roman ones are a bit nicer, thats the only difference. And worth having since they are so old.

Obviously I don't live in the USA. :rofl:
 
Lack of oxygen, water, and soil makeup plays the biggest part in the breakdown of Iron. trapped in a non acidic clay, Iron would be preserved for hundreds of years i would think.
 
roman steel nails??? by us in the netherlands we find them also from copper and bronze gr adje
 
The ground content as well as moisture has much to do with deterioration.
 
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