A buddy and I got into an old homestead recently where a house had burned down about 70 years ago. It's a totally bizarre site because the bulk of our finds have come from the other end of the property away from where the house was....not sure if debris was bulldozed there or what. The thing is, we're finding stuff as recent as wheats and even a Franklin half all the way back to as old as a Connecticut copper and a KGIII. The more recent stuff is all fire damaged. I dug a 1954 Roosevelt out of there that I thought might have been a cob at first because of how distorted everything was, the Franklin half was shaped like a bowl, another Roosevelt I dug was bubbled up, and a Barber half that came out of there was severely damaged. All the old stuff is fine though, so we have to assume there was something else there at some point that would have brought people in.
Anyway, what we've noticed is that almost all of our signals are reading different than what they should by quite a bit...like the Roosevelts for me came up in the 30s, my buddy's Franklin half came up as a 05-39 on his Etrac, and so on. We aren't seeing ash layers or anything like that in the field, which again makes me wonder if things were bulldozed over. Do fire sites like this produce weird numbers normally because of something in the soil or could the detectors just be picking up the damage to the coins?
Along those lines, I was told by a guy recently that wood ash masks pretty badly. In his words, you can stick a silver dollar under an inch of wood ash and the detector will completely miss it. Any truth to that?
Anyway, what we've noticed is that almost all of our signals are reading different than what they should by quite a bit...like the Roosevelts for me came up in the 30s, my buddy's Franklin half came up as a 05-39 on his Etrac, and so on. We aren't seeing ash layers or anything like that in the field, which again makes me wonder if things were bulldozed over. Do fire sites like this produce weird numbers normally because of something in the soil or could the detectors just be picking up the damage to the coins?
Along those lines, I was told by a guy recently that wood ash masks pretty badly. In his words, you can stick a silver dollar under an inch of wood ash and the detector will completely miss it. Any truth to that?