Beachfront pottery

georgia flatlander

Full Member
May 21, 2017
175
412
Southeastern U.S. (Georgia)
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
I joined a friend at the Forgotten Coast in Florida’s Franklin County yesterday to do a little fishing. We beached our kayaks at one point to look at the bank of a tidal creek that cut through the white sand. Some of the forest nearby had eroded, and the banks of the creek were slowly collapsing.
There were literally thousands of pot shards spilling from the sand. Apparently, a developer had pushed existing dirt onto the original beach sand to clear an area for lots that never sold. High tides, tropical storms and erosion had covered the soil with displaced beach sand. The recent hurricane uncovered the pottery. We would have needed a dump truck to salvage all of it, so I “rescued” some of the more decorative pieces before they were lost in the ocean forever.
And, as a bonus, we caught some redfish and grilled them for dinner. Fun day!

CEA3C5DB-C358-4C34-AD65-36CCD74EE1A5.jpeg
9A090584-6E7A-4196-A42C-7F7DE050C27D.jpeg
1EE99217-72C7-4202-A22C-99032CD027A3.jpeg
FA9E4D99-1127-4C82-91C0-4FA8605C8395.jpeg
E031E5F4-38AB-4C2E-8EEC-61FB3A275208.jpeg
35694821-A6C9-49B4-9759-A69D01E1C979.jpeg
83E987E0-4600-437C-A2BF-65D29CA8A485.jpeg
DF18C6E7-6B32-4CF3-86ED-D7B5DAA2A81C.jpeg
6FC5A627-6EEA-4FDD-A75A-D42986E90AD8.jpeg
AA5ED0C1-4B30-40F5-A941-9FC7E75528E9.jpeg
 

Last edited:
Upvote 0

dognose

Silver Member
Apr 15, 2009
3,041
8,163
Indiana
Detector(s) used
Fisher F70
that would be a great day. I would have a hard time leaving. The fresh fish is a nice bonus for sure.
 

arrow86

Silver Member
May 6, 2014
3,374
4,072
Eastern Shore Maryland
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Wow , I’ve never been big on pottery but there’s some really neat pieces in there some cool designs you don’t see to often. Do you know what time period these are from ?
 

OP
OP
G

georgia flatlander

Full Member
May 21, 2017
175
412
Southeastern U.S. (Georgia)
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Wow , I’ve never been big on pottery but there’s some really neat pieces in there some cool designs you don’t see to often. Do you know what time period these are from ?

Woodland, mainly Swift Creek that evolved into Weeden Island. They are very common along the gulf coast, and anywhere from 800-1200 years old. This was during the time of the Mississippian era mound builders, so a lot of this stuff has pretty intricate designs, although nothing like the designs found in the actual mounds. These pieces were likely just common-use pottery, and were either abandoned or thrown in a midden. There’s no telling what’s covered by ocean, since the shoreline extended nearly 100 miles from where we found this stuff 10,000 years ago.
 

sandchip

Silver Member
Oct 29, 2010
4,351
6,871
Georgia
Detector(s) used
Teknetics T2SE
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Wow. That's incredible. No telling what else will be exposed as time passes.
 

monsterrack

Silver Member
Apr 15, 2013
4,419
5,815
Southwest Mississippi
Detector(s) used
Garrett, and Whites
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Those are some nice finds and I would have to have that small pot restored. If you want someone that is good PM me.
 

joshuaream

Silver Member
Jun 25, 2009
3,170
4,482
Florida & Hong Kong
You are far enough north that there could be some stone tools in the mix. I’d look for sharks teeth in the surf with a scoop, heavier items tend to get buried quicker and don’t wash around as much.

Those shards will be worn down to basically nothing within a couple of weeks of getting washed out, the beach is not a kind environment for pottery.
 

Grizz12

Sr. Member
Dec 22, 2018
317
517
Alaska
Detector(s) used
Nox 800
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
The lines, dots and dashes are more than design, they usually tell of family or tribal history. I think I would never leave a site like that because its so darn cool!!
 

newnan man

Gold Member
Aug 8, 2005
5,241
16,418
Beautiful Florida
Primary Interest:
Relic Hunting
That area of Florida is beautiful and lots of stuff to be found. Joshuream is correct about hard stone. You're closse to Al. & Ga. From there is a greenish hard stone I've seen celts, hammers etc. made from.
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Top