bigscoop
Gold Member
- Joined
- Jun 4, 2010
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- Location
- Wherever there be treasure!
- Detector(s) used
- Older blue Excal with full mods, Equinox 800.
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
This summer has been especially slow here on the East Coast, so.....like many others I was forced to become a student of deep sand. Given this, I just want to take some time to tell you what I learned in sand school this year.
A different way to look at things:
I just went through several gold and silver rings I have on hand, measuring and weighing each one. The biggest ring I have on hand is just over an inch in diameter, the smallest was right 5/8” in diameter. Of these, the widest band is just under ¾” and the smallest is about 3/16” wide. The heaviest ring is only about 11 grams and the lightest is 2.3 grams. However, even with these relatively small dimensions these are pretty dense metals with very little surface area to help slow their descent, they are certainly many times heavier then the soft and loose surface they are trying to penetrate. Jiggle or vibrate that surface just a bit and the task of sinking even becomes much easier, much faster. Such a tiny item, and miles and miles of deep sand. Well, you get the picture. But sometimes even great coverage isn't enough, and believe me, I spent hours upon hours with the deepest and most sensitive machines I could get my hands on, all the while making sure I never missed a single inch of sand. Sure, every great once in a while I'd find a nice recent drop but over all the results still proved dismal for the time and labors invested. So here's what all this labor and time taught me this year.
Try this, the next time you are walking on top of the wet sand take note of the water around your feet that gets squeezed out from under you with each stride, then watch that water get sucked back in as you raise your foot. In reality you just created a type of “sponge effect” everywhere you step, now imagine hundreds of feet passing all over this same section of beach. Think of all the minute vibrations that are taking place and acting to disturb this soft wet sand, even the crashing of the waves at the breaker line can be felt throughout this soft wet sand. You can’t always see it, but these very fine, soft wet sand particles are always shifting and moving, if ever so slightly. And as it continues to move, our heavier items with little surface area keep right on sinking. Raise your foot and stomp down on this wet sand, the effects of this constant vibration is now clearly magnified as you can easily see the vibration you created spread out from the point of impact. If we could take a tiny, very sensitive microphone and bury it several feet deep in this wet sand we would be amazed by the amount of constant vibration we would hear. We would hear the passing of every vehicle, the pounding of every wave, the passing of every footstep, etc. And each time we hear these things this soft wet sand is, even if only minutely, moving and shifting.
Gold prospectors and even diamond hunters have recognized this for centuries, that the heaviest and most dense items will always be found near, or on, some form of hard pack under these lighter and less dense surfaces. This same basic knowledge is even applied as they are actively panning or slucing or high-banking, etc. Shake all the collected material and then look for the heavier, more dense, pieces to be found at the bottom. This same concept is what makes our beaches so tough to hunt when there is a lot of soft wet sand over the harder packs, if you don’t get the recently lost items quickly they will get buried too swiftly and to deep for our detection And they will keep right on sinking until they reach a point where the substrate is as least as dense as they are. The more vibration and movement that takes place in these lighter surfaces the faster our denser items will pass through them. But take away all this soft wet sand and……well, I get excited just thinking about it! Yes the deep wet sand of this past summer has been a bummer, and while I have resigned to other pursuits for the time being, this sand has played this same trick on just every other hunter too, so, there must be "a lot" of goodies just out of our reach and prime for the picking when this deep wet sand gets removed.
A different way to look at things:
I just went through several gold and silver rings I have on hand, measuring and weighing each one. The biggest ring I have on hand is just over an inch in diameter, the smallest was right 5/8” in diameter. Of these, the widest band is just under ¾” and the smallest is about 3/16” wide. The heaviest ring is only about 11 grams and the lightest is 2.3 grams. However, even with these relatively small dimensions these are pretty dense metals with very little surface area to help slow their descent, they are certainly many times heavier then the soft and loose surface they are trying to penetrate. Jiggle or vibrate that surface just a bit and the task of sinking even becomes much easier, much faster. Such a tiny item, and miles and miles of deep sand. Well, you get the picture. But sometimes even great coverage isn't enough, and believe me, I spent hours upon hours with the deepest and most sensitive machines I could get my hands on, all the while making sure I never missed a single inch of sand. Sure, every great once in a while I'd find a nice recent drop but over all the results still proved dismal for the time and labors invested. So here's what all this labor and time taught me this year.
Try this, the next time you are walking on top of the wet sand take note of the water around your feet that gets squeezed out from under you with each stride, then watch that water get sucked back in as you raise your foot. In reality you just created a type of “sponge effect” everywhere you step, now imagine hundreds of feet passing all over this same section of beach. Think of all the minute vibrations that are taking place and acting to disturb this soft wet sand, even the crashing of the waves at the breaker line can be felt throughout this soft wet sand. You can’t always see it, but these very fine, soft wet sand particles are always shifting and moving, if ever so slightly. And as it continues to move, our heavier items with little surface area keep right on sinking. Raise your foot and stomp down on this wet sand, the effects of this constant vibration is now clearly magnified as you can easily see the vibration you created spread out from the point of impact. If we could take a tiny, very sensitive microphone and bury it several feet deep in this wet sand we would be amazed by the amount of constant vibration we would hear. We would hear the passing of every vehicle, the pounding of every wave, the passing of every footstep, etc. And each time we hear these things this soft wet sand is, even if only minutely, moving and shifting.
Gold prospectors and even diamond hunters have recognized this for centuries, that the heaviest and most dense items will always be found near, or on, some form of hard pack under these lighter and less dense surfaces. This same basic knowledge is even applied as they are actively panning or slucing or high-banking, etc. Shake all the collected material and then look for the heavier, more dense, pieces to be found at the bottom. This same concept is what makes our beaches so tough to hunt when there is a lot of soft wet sand over the harder packs, if you don’t get the recently lost items quickly they will get buried too swiftly and to deep for our detection And they will keep right on sinking until they reach a point where the substrate is as least as dense as they are. The more vibration and movement that takes place in these lighter surfaces the faster our denser items will pass through them. But take away all this soft wet sand and……well, I get excited just thinking about it! Yes the deep wet sand of this past summer has been a bummer, and while I have resigned to other pursuits for the time being, this sand has played this same trick on just every other hunter too, so, there must be "a lot" of goodies just out of our reach and prime for the picking when this deep wet sand gets removed.

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