Pretty sure this is cut silver. Can anyone help identify?

ATpro5

Hero Member
Jan 4, 2013
583
191
SW Virginia
Detector(s) used
Whites Coinmaster,At Pro,Minelab Etrac
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Upvote 1
A while back I posted what I thought was cut silver. It just turned out to be a piece of a aluminum token. This one looks more promising. I can see what looks to be a crown possibly? Could anyone help me identify it? I'll put the pics in the comments. Thanks!



ForumRunner_20150203_182502.png



ForumRunner_20150203_182508.png



ForumRunner_20150203_182512.png
 

Hey thats pretty cool. It looks similar to a Polish 3 polker coin. Here is one from 1624.

<img src="http://www.treasurenet.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=1115155"/>

I think you nailed it.
 

pretty cool and quick ID
 

Wow that's a great find. Don't see those often
 

Sweet find, smaller even than the tiny hammered farthings the fellas in England turn up.

I poked around and it seems that the higher-end weight of the 3 Polkers (nice ID cross potent) was 1.2 grams. 1/8th of that is 0.15 grams. A Spanish dollar was around 27 grams, so this bit of cut silver would have been the equivalent of barely more than 1/200th of that at full weight, or basically a half-cent or so at its likely current weight. That's gotta be the smallest cut silver i recall being posted here, congrats on a very very interesting find!
 

Last edited:
A while back I posted what I thought was cut silver. It just turned out to be a piece of a aluminum token. This one looks more promising. I can see what looks to be a crown possibly? Could anyone help me identify it? I'll put the pics in the comments. Thanks!

Spit on it and wrap it in aluminum foil. After about 10 seconds if it smells like sulfur you know it is silver.Sure looks right to me. HH!
 

Sweet find, smaller even than the tiny hammered farthings the fellas in England turn up.

I poked around and it seems that the higher-end weight of the 3 Polkers (nice ID cross potent) was 1.2 grams. 1/8th of that is 0.15 grams. A Spanish dollar was around 27 grams, so this bit of cut silver would have been the equivalent of barely more than 1/200th of that at full weight, or basically a half-cent or so at its likely current weight. That's gotta be the smallest cut silver i recall being posted here, congrats on a very very interesting find!

That's really neat plumbata. Thanks for the info. I wonder what a half-cent worth of silver could buy in the 17th & 18th centuries?
 

Now that's a fantastic ID! AND a GREAT find!!! Congrats on a nice 1600s silver!
 

Nice going on the cut piece of silver.
 

Very cool and MR T, that was an interesting link. Ty for that.
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top