red clay pottery piece

BeachComber7

Sr. Member
May 12, 2012
461
66
Treasure Coast-Florida
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SOHIO

Bronze Member
Dec 6, 2010
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I think its just a natural pc....can i say it steve ? i don't see that having ever been altered by man.


but what do i know:dontknow:
 

GatorBoy

Gold Member
May 28, 2012
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I gave my opinion when I saw it in the shipwreck forum.. I'm only posting to add a piece of my red from the same area for comparison.

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birdpointgriswold

Hero Member
May 23, 2012
889
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I think its a piece of ocean tumbled brick, but i could be wrong! but keep looking its out there! Good luck!
 

Last edited:

gilmerman

Hero Member
Dec 31, 2006
682
433
Central South East
That is a crafted jug or jar to carry something, seeds or liquids. There is a distinct lip and a glaze inside the shard. Is it turned like on a wheel or hand made? Interesting, where could it have come from and when was it made? Thanks
 

GatorBoy

Gold Member
May 28, 2012
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It may be Spanish. Definatly not native American. I'm from the same town. The material and temper is wrong as well as the working of the clay.
 

OP
OP
BeachComber7

BeachComber7

Sr. Member
May 12, 2012
461
66
Treasure Coast-Florida
Detector(s) used
Bounty Hunter Pioneer and Tesoro deLeon
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
According to a professional who was able to examine the piece thru several photographs, I have copied/pasted his response below.
The piece dates between 1600-s and 1700's. It's a keeper!
"what you have is indeed a piece of earthenware typical of the Spanish colonial period. Likely the side of what was known as an Olive Jar, a direct descendant of the old roman amphora of the Mediterranean. Not a common find but not unexpected."
 

birdpointgriswold

Hero Member
May 23, 2012
889
228
🏆 Honorable Mentions:
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Primary Interest:
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BeachComber7 said:
According to a professional who was able to examine the piece thru several photographs, I have copied/pasted his response below.
The piece dates between 1600-s and 1700's. It's a keeper!
"what you have is indeed a piece of earthenware typical of the Spanish colonial period. Likely the side of what was known as an Olive Jar, a direct descendant of the old roman amphora of the Mediterranean. Not a common find but not unexpected."

Good call gator boy! Congrats on the info!
 

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