Thanks to NHunter, our latest contributor with 1 Share $15 brings us ever closer to our goal.
Added 3.16.10- 5:55pm: Thank you to our latest contributors: Omega 1 Share $15 and lcoopie 1 Share $15. You just moved the red on the goal thermometer upwards. Thanks to BigE and some others for suggesting the idea and thanks to spoon for some quick implementation. (I could thank people 10x a day and not be done).
You can be up to your elbows in dirt (like LordM right now in the Black Banks) or up to your elbows in commitment (either way). Folks who contribute $15 are equal to folks who contribute $$$++. A single share can mean much more sacrifice to an individual who has little than to a well-to-do contributor who tosses off a larger amount. Having said that, certain contributions stand out and it’s always nice to tug on the caps brim and thank the gov’ners.
Yesterday it was lkeigwin $150 10 Shares, large. Today $150 10 Shares large from our brother in Finland, Zot on the PCGS Metal Detecting forum!! Paljon kiitoksia are small words for these large deeds. Or should I say, Kiitti.
My heart has always appreciated the MD forum-it’s where I first read one of LordM’s posts and it’s (admittedly) a smaller forum than US and World, yet it has an unmistakable cache-”treasure”.
Sans discussion, nothing else makes acorns curl up into even smaller, more compact packets of concentration. If you thought you were looking for a coin, maybe a cache is discovered! Great discoveries are rarely made in the comfort of a couch.
Ok…I guess I want to try to say Thank You on behalf of myself, Spoon, and especially for Lord Marcovan for a great start to the second half- Merci, Mesi, Matu suksama, Wa’-do, Durdaladawhy, Tak, Dank u wel, Dua Netjer en ek, Cheers, Ta, Ic sæcge eow þancas, Vinaka, Paljon kiitoksia, Danke, Efharisto poli, Mahsi’, Toda raba, Kam sia, Köszi, Agyamanac unay, Go raibh mile maith agaibh, Grazie, Arigato gozaimasu, Obrigadu, Spassibo, Mwebare, Kamsahamnida, Shukur, Mèsi plen, Gratiam habeo, Moducué, Misaotra, Xie xie, Msuulaang, ika hoki, Chaltu may, Baiika, Laengz zingh, Wneeweh, Niku tab’o, Tlazohcamati huel miac, Tusen takk, Waaqni sii haa kennu, Dziekuje, Muchas gracias,Dannaba, Gestena, Giitus eanat, Fa’afetai tele, Anugurihiitosumi, Moran taing, Thenks, Gran mersi, Sha ja non, Dakujem vám, Tack så mycket, Obrigado, Khawp khun khrap, Guneshcheesh, Tesekkurler, Nihei deebiru, Spasibi, Moltes gracies, Cám ơn quý vị rât nhiều, Diolch yn fawr iawn, Ngiyabonga ka khulu, Choshklenteco, Hach dyos bo’otik.
If I left anyone out, please let me know. If I did hit your language and you haven’t purchased a share-please consider doing so…it’s always about the karma.
4:00pm- Chis from Northeast numismatics is donating a nice graded coin for a future giveaway. Thanks Chris!
added 12:26pm-I swear it’s posts like this that keep me going. It came to me but is obviously directed to Rob, under the heading of Purchase 1 share of your adventure…. : Hello. have read many of your Collector ‘s Forum posts and would be honored to help support your trip to the old world. My Collector’s forum ID Heavymetal -love your hat. Another valuable pledged share of $15. Like grains of sand, with the right wind, they can add up to a mighty force…
We’re off to a nice start in our 2nd half push to send LordM to England. I’d like to thank these new contributors for their support:
surfinxHI 1 Share $15, lkeigwin $150 10 Shares, JCMhouston $15 1 Share.
The donated Kennedy half dollar sold for $35.57-a great effort! The gold Type 1 dollar is up to $75 on silent auction (we will be closing that in a few days I think). The ASE will be moved to eBay on wednesday the 17th if it garners no bids here. Other donated coins to follow soon.
Thanks to Don Willis of PCGS who allowed 3 update threads on the forums yesterday-many thanks!
LordM is currently digging the Black Banks (I believe he told me) and should have an interesting story or two to tell in the next couple of days. I really envy him the weather that allows MDing at this point in March.
We’ve had communication from some English Cousins, the Swansea Metal Detecting Club in South Wales, UK which is offering to assist LordM in any way they can when he gets to England. Nice folks!
Our latest giveaway, the Yellow Trip Smiley on the World Coin forum (which could use some additional participants) will be closing on wednesday. If you like Vatican coins or a Turkish mint set or a slabbed French Comoros, or even an Ancient, you’ll be well-served with this giveaway.
I’d like to say the fund-raising is all downhill from here but I doubt that. The 2nd half push will require great effort and generosity from a number of people. Luckily we have a couple of months to do it in; we just need to maintain momentum. Thanks again to all who have supported and will support this endeavor.
We are pleased to list Nederveit as our latest contributor! 1 Share $15.
Silvereagles 82 wants to up his shares from 2 to 4 for the 2nd half of our push for a total of $60 -Congratulations!
Welcome to Black Mountain Coins (Danglen) our latest contributor with a generous $50 store credit for a future giveaway! We’ll keep you posted.
Congratulations to pakasmom who increased their shares from 1 to 3!
12 days into March and we’re halfway there; who’d a thunk it?
We’ve hit the $2000 mark in two weeks! An absolute testimony to the generosity of the PCGS forums! Some folks have thought the trip was off because of the way the first thread was deleted and are now delighted to see the effort is alive and well. Pakasmom was one of those who increased their shares upon discovering this site.
When we first started I thought it would take at least a couple of months to raise the trip money and I still think so. I just didn’t think the halfway point would come so soon! And when I say halfway, that’s the absolute minimum-it would be nice to have a cushion. We’ve got great giveaways coming up for all who have contributed so far and hopefully these will attract more contributors.
Now’s the time to gently urge others to take part who haven’t, or to increase your shares as we get closer to the goal.
In the donated coin category (this will raise the money for the Metal Detector Giveaway) we are at: $65 for the Type 1 gold dollar, $0 on the ASE (these two on the forums), $15 on the slabbed Kennedy (on eBay). These three coins will be joined by others and this mini effort should soon bear fruit. We are putting together a very nice little package that should absolutely delight the winner.
LordM knew that Wayne Whatley (newbiecollector) would have loved to see this enterprise take shape and would have been one of our first contributors. (Quick story here-when we were raising money for a birth coin for 1Jester’s new son, Wayne PM’d me and said that if we reached $200 total in our small effort that he would match that amount and wanted to remain anonymous about it. It shows you what a heart of gold he had!)
In memory of that fine gentleman who was taken from us way too soon, LordM bought a memorial share in his name-I thought it was such a great idea that I followed suit. We want him along for the ride! We will also be having “The great Shipcoin Giveaway” in his memory further down the line. Watch this space for details.
On Sunday I have permission to return to an old house site that was very good to me when I hunted it twice in 1999. There were plenty of older coins (including some nice silver) found at the time. I’ll leave it at that, except to say I’m very optimistic. I doubt I even “scratched the surface” back then, and I have a more advanced metal detector now. I’d put my odds of finding old coins and/or silver fairly high. Of course there are never any guarantees in this game- even when the time comes for me to dig in England for a week. I only hope that I’ll do you folks proud, both this weekend and when the trip across the pond happens.
Since one of the goals I have for this trip is to dig at least one Roman coin, no matter how small or crude, it’s time to give such a coin away. I have here a small Roman bronze coin or barbarous radiate. (Sorry, there’s no picture of it at present, but it very much resembles the one at the top of the page here.)
I think the portrait on the coin resembles Tetricus I (270 to 273 or 274 AD), the last ruler of the Gallic empire that broke away from Rome for about fourteen years in the mid-3rd century AD. The joint reign of Tetricus I and his son Tetricus II ended when they were defeated by Aurelian and the breakaway Gallic empire was brought back into the fold of the greater Roman empire. (In a rare example of imperial clemency, Aurelian spared their lives- the fate of defeated usurpers and enemies was usually far more grim. )
On these coins, the emperor wears a “radiate” crown, which looks like sun rays coming from his head (I believe this had something to do with Sol, the sun god). That is why this particular type of coin is sometimes referred to as a “radiate”, or the local imitations as “barbarous radiates”.
At some point after the weekend is up, I’ll fire up the random number generator again, and one of our shareholders will win this coin.
Edit- Hyperion won it!
William, aka “FilthyBroke”, has won all the fossils I found in the last Digs O’ The Day installment. Since the finds weren’t all that impressive, he is also getting the large half of a megalodon shark tooth I found last summer, which is also pictured in that story. In other words, he just won the random drawing for everything pictured in that story, with the exception of the tooth my daughter found! (Can’t give that one away- it’s hers, and her first fossil find, y’know.)
Congratulations, William!
And again, thank you to all of our sponsors. We’ll be giving more goodies away further on, just for fun.
A quick thank you to ca0100000, our newest contributor- 1 share $15
If you read my latest dig story, the “Bladen Road” one, I would like to do a giveaway of everything shown in the story. (With the exception of Victoria’s shark tooth, of course.) This means the big half-megalodon tooth fossil I found there last year, and the five fossils I found in the story, plus perhaps an additional random fossil or two.
As of this posting, we’re at 127 shares pledged so far. Let’s say when we hit 140, I’ll draw a winner, using a random number generator, and each contributor gets one chance per share to win the fossils. They’re not superb fossils, but maybe the big half of a shark tooth will make somebody an interesting paperweight or something. (I do have some more where that came from, too.)
~RWS/”LM”
Thanks to docday2003, our latest contributor with 4 Shares $60. Thank you sir!
Reading Rob’s digging posts are always fascinating! This latest one no less because it involves fossils, his daughter and an accident. Check the page index for the “Bladen Road” story-lots of images
.
We’ve had something of a slowdown in new pledges but members are getting their initial pledge money to me by Paypal, money orders and checks. We’ve collected about half of what has been pledged so far-time to get the rest in. We’re also starting to receive coins we can auction on eBay to get that new metal detector for our latest giveaway-sure to be a huge success!
Ask your forum friends if they’ve supported the trip effort yet. If not, please encourage them to do so-we need this second wave of support to continue!
We’d just returned from an overnight trip down to Jacksonville, Florida, and the afternoon found me a little tired and sleepy. I knew I’d only end up napping if I stayed around the house, so I decided to initiate my “walk a mile a day” plan. As mentioned in the previous story, I’ve gotten really out of shape and I’ll be needing to start exercising more and shedding a few pounds before my week-long digging expedition to England in the fall, if that ends up happening. (As of this writing, my friends and readers have put up quite a lot of support to send me on the trip- over 43 contributors have pledged 123 shares totaling $1,865 so far, so it looks as though the trip is becoming a very real possibility!)
I wasn’t up to a detector outing on this particular afternoon, since my knees took a week to recover from the last outing, and I still haven’t bought knee pads. So today was mostly just for the sake of exercise rather than digging.
Still, I knew of a place quite close to home where I could combine a little low-tech, easy treasure hunting with a mile-long walk. Not a detector search, but something simpler… a fossil hunt.
The required tools for a hunt like this come as standard equipment on most human bodies. Nothing but feet, eyes, and hands- that’s it! My optional tool is just a long wooden stake for poking and flipping stuff out of the sand without having to bend and stoop constantly. Today I also brought along an old drywall hammer that has a small hatchet on one end, to act as a rock hammer for chiseling stuff out of the hardpan. In our dirt roads during dry weather, the compressed earth gets really hard-packed and baked to the consistency of brick. Of course I also brought along my wife’s digital camera to document the outing.
The site I chose for my mile-long walk is Bladen Road, in the western portion of Glynn County, Georgia, quite near our rural home. I figured it would be the perfect place to combine walking with fossil hunting, and possibly some wildlife photography as well. One of my birdwatching goals is to see the brightly-colored Painted Bunting. They’ve been spotted around the marshes on barrier islands here, but I’ve never had the honor of meeting one. If and when I ever do, I sure hope I have a camera on hand. With me on foot out in the middle of nowhere on a desolate country road, there is no telling what sorts of birds and wildlife I might see.
If you’re wondering how a road like this can be a source of fossils, it’s because our county obviously uses dredge spoil material to fill in and resurface the dirt roads out here. This dredge spoil is basically sand, pumped up from the bottom of local waterways like the Atlantic shipping channel, Saint Simons Sound, and Brunswick Harbor. It’s full of fossils, including a good number of shark teeth. The shark tooth is Georgia’s state fossil.
One of last year’s unwritten outings was a stroll down Bladen Road, and I found half of a large megalodon tooth. The fossilized teeth of C. megalodon, the extinct giant white shark, are the prize fossils of this area and the biggest shark teeth known. This partial megalodon fossil was buried in the hardpan soil of the roadbed with only a little bit of the root peeking out, and I’d had to chisel it out with the tire tool from the car. These fossils are relatively uncommon finds and are always exciting when they turn up.
Later that same afternoon, down at the boat ramp near our house (the road to which is also surfaced with dredge sand), I was with my daughter Victoria, and she found her first shark tooth. She’d seen some telltale black material in the whitish sand, and asked me to dig it out for her. Was it the typical small tooth of some more common species? No! It was a mostly-intact Megalodon, about four inches long! Wow, talk about beginner’s luck! That was quite a memorable afternoon, with father and daughter both scoring megalodons in the space of about an hour.
My half tooth, at about four and a half inches, was the larger of the two, but hers was more intact, being a whole tooth with just the corners of the root broken off. These bigger teeth tend to suffer some damage when they come up through the dredge, so fully intact ones are truly rare and special finds. Even partial ones are exciting enough for us. Most of the really impressive intact specimens are found by “black water” divers, who grope along the bottom in murky water and find them by touch. That doesn’t sound like a lot of fun to me, so I’m grateful to have the opportunity to hunt these fascinating fossils on dry land.
Victoria wasn’t in the mood to join me this afternoon when she was told I’d be walking a mile and would be out there a while. She went next door to play with the neighbor’s daughter. I told my wife where I was headed, and set out on the day’s adventure.
The road stretched out for miles through the piney woods, with nothing but thickets on either side for most of its length. Occasionally it was criscrossed by other, narrower tracks, which are no doubt used by the paper companies who harvest the trees, or hunters who lease the land. I passed a pair of pickup trucks on my way in, and the men in them released some baying hounds into the woods. I’m a hunter of coins, relics, and fossils rather than wild animals, so I don’t really keep abreast of the hunting season, though I suppose I should, for safety’s sake. I’m not sure what the hounds were after. Deer? Raccoon? Wild hogs? We have all of those. I heard gunshots in the far distance. These particular men didn’t have guns in hand at the moment. They got back into their trucks and took off down the road behind me, leaving their dogs in the woods to chase whatever quarry had been flushed out. I guess they would meet up with the dogs further back down the road, in the direction I’d come from.
I drove on a couple more miles to give the hunters a wide berth. My plan was to find two crossroads that were about a half mile apart, pull the car over onto one of them, walk to the other, and then back, making a mile’s hike in total. If I could walk a mile a day, maybe I’d have a few less pounds on my body and a few more fossils in my pocket.
After parking my car at a crossroad and beginning the walk, I immediately noticed many small bits of white seashell fragments in the dirt road. This was a sure sign of dredge sand. The next thing I looked for was the telltale black of fossilized material, or the triangular shape of fossil shark teeth, which can be either black or grey, and are usually a bit glossier than the bits of shell.
It wasn’t long before I noticed the shape of a shark tooth in the dirt. It wasn’t a big megalodon, but those are rare finds, after all. This was a smaller tooth, but obviously a tooth. The enamel on it was grey and it had tiny serrations along one edge. I’m not sure what species of shark it came from- when it comes to fossils, I’m no paleontologist but rather a pure amateur. I’ve learned how to distinguish a few types, but that’s about all. This tooth, like the four-and-a-half inch Meg I’d found last year near the same stretch of road, was split in two vertically from root to point. It was no great prize, but a step in the right direction. I photographed it where it lay.
I was soon spotting other bits of black fossilized material in the sand. Most of these proved to be bits of whalebone. I’ve heard that whales were the primary food source for prehistoric sharks like megalodon, and usually where there’s fossilized whalebone, there are shark teeth. This whalebone is such a common find on these sites that we don’t always pick it up anymore. Still, because the unenameled root and core portions of a big megalodon tooth are black and porous-looking, just like fossil whalebone is, I usually try to pop all black fossil pieces out of the ground to make sure they aren’t part of a buried Meg. The whalebone tends to be in narrow pieces, with striations like woodgrain along it. I spotted a piece of black fossil material and found it impossible to pry out, so I had to resort to the drywall hammer. As I’d thought, it proved to be a small piece of whalebone.
The next piece of fossilized material had a round, knoblike shape on one side, and sort of a porous, pockmarked look on the other. I have no idea what it is. I’ve read about gastroliths, which are stones that had been ingested by prehistoric creatures, perhaps to aid digestion or act as “ballast”. Some of the gastroliths I’ve seen in pictures looked a bit like this, but I believe gastroliths are usually actual stones, rather than fossil material. Maybe this was the knobbed end of a bone that fit into a ball-and-socket type joint? I have no idea. Fossils from both marine and land animals can be found in this dredge spoil, since the coastline fluctuated over millions of years.
The new season’s mosquitoes are out, now. They were flying around me, though they apparently hadn’t fully developed their bloodlust yet. I was thankful for that. They mostly just swarmed around, never landing to take a bite. Only once did I get my ear buzzed. I am sure it won’t be long before they become really aggressive.
Surprisingly, I saw no birds or animals. I thought my quieter approach on foot would give me better opportunity to see some wildlife. Apparently they saw, heard, or smelled me coming well in advance, though, and made themselves scarce. Only a faint whirring of insects in the thicket announced the presence of any living creatures other than me and the mosquitoes. Maybe I actually have a better chance of seeing wild critters when I’m in the car, because though that method of approach is much louder, the added speed gives them less of a chance to beat it into the woods before being seen.
Finally there was a subdued crashing sound in the thicket, indicating that I’d startled some small animal or large bird. I never saw what made the noise, though. It was long gone into the dense underbrush. It didn’t sound big enough to be a deer. Speaking of which, some tracks nearby indicated that deer had been here. They’d probably come to the side of the road to drink from the drainage ditch. They’re a very common sight in this area.

I reached the second crossroad, half a mile from my car, and turned back, walking on the opposite side of the road and also watching the looser sand along the shoulders for fossils. Soon I pried out another bit of fossil material and found another round, knoblike thing, very much like the first “mystery fossil” but a little bit larger this time. I was no closer to having any idea what they were, though.
I returned to the first crossroad and my car, having broken a light sweat since I’d worn a jacket and the temperature was probably near seventy. One mile walked. It wasn’t so bad. I doubt I could have jogged it, but maybe if I can make myself walk a mile a day, I’ll be in a bit better shape. Surely it can’t hurt. My appetite for walking was spent but I still wanted to find a good fossil, so I decided to stop by the boat ramp on my way home, where Victoria had found her Meg last year.
As I rumbled down the washboard road, I saw a Jeep Cherokee approaching and moved over to let it pass. As it did, I noticed it was Heather, the lady who lives next door to us. She is the same neighbor whose daughter Victoria had gone to play with. I thought it strange to be passing her out here in the middle of nowhere. She stopped and was backing up, so I did the same, bringing our driver’s side windows up next to one another.
“What are you doing out here, in the middle of nowhere?” I asked.
“Looking for you,” she replied.
I thought she was kidding for a moment, until I saw her face. It was serious, and even a little worried.
“What?”
“Victoria fell off the swing set and broke her arm. Lenee tried to reach you on your cell phone but couldn’t get through, so she sent me out to look for you. They’ve gone on to the immediate care center.”
I blurted out a profanity, failing to notice that Heather’s daughter, Victoria’s playmate, was in the passenger seat. I apologized.
I had brought my cell phone out with me, but hadn’t turned it on. I seldom do, unless I need to make an outgoing call. I turned it on and attempted to call my wife, Lenee, but got no signal. Heather and her daughter drove on, and I raced down what remained of Bladen Road, all the while trying to get a signal on the phone. About the time I reached the southern terminus of the road, where it becomes paved, I got enough of a signal to call, and was told by my wife that the immediate care center had sent them on to the emergency room.
When I arrived at the hospital, wife and daughter were both much calmer than I’d expected. We’d gone through a similar ordeal a while back, when Victoria got kicked hard in the forehead by her pony. That one was more serious. This time, thanks to pain medication, she was relaxed and actually smiled at me when I came in.
She had done a backflip off the swing, landing on her face and hands, getting a mouthful of dirt and breaking the radius bone in her left arm, near the wrist. She took the whole procedure at the hospital well, I must say. Better than I would have done, at her age. (Or even twice her age.) She was actually concerned that she’d miss school the next day! It turns out that her teacher, who recently had a baby, was coming back to the school to visit and show off the newborn. Not even a broken arm could keep Victoria from seeing her teacher and that baby! (It didn’t, either- though she was out of school the following day, I did bring her in for an hour so she could see the baby and show off her cast to the class.)
So like the last outing when my car blew up, this one ended in disaster, but nothing permanent, thank goodness.
It wasn’t the most productive of outings, but at least I got out. I had my one-mile walk in the woods, and found five fossils: one partial shark tooth, two pieces of whalebone, and the two rounded “mystery fossils”. The day wasn’t a total waste.
~RWS
INDEX OF PAST DIG STORIES (temporarily housed on Collectors Universe)
3.7.2010- Our latest contributors are: Grip for 5 shares, Joan.of.art for 3 shares, and Bailathacl for 1 share.
So nice to wake up in the morning to friendly and supportive e-mails from folks like these!
Almost every day now when I check my mail there is a cheery message title or two (or more) listing contributions or support for LordM’s anticipated trip to dig in the Queen Mothers green fields. It has made opening the mail an event I can look forward to; not a spam-destroying chore.![]()
Every message I receive speaks of a deep affection for LordM and a willingness to support his quest. To be fair, it’s almost certainly a quest we would all love to participate in. That is why, perhaps, the level of contributions towards this trip has been steady and strong. Rob has done many kindnesses over the years it seems, and people have long memories… and through his writings and images, he’ll make the experience come alive for all of us, and in the end we will have actually participated, part of a story that has only just begun, with an ending that still needs writing.
There has been much hustle and bustle in the background and the dust clouds are still settling- hopefully we’re going to have some trip specifics to share with you in the near future.
Don’t forget this invaluable tidbit about the importance of living vs existing in the words of Stephen Vincent Benét who famously said: “Life is not lost by dying; life is lost minute by minute, day by dragging day, in all the thousand small uncaring ways”.








