What signs do you consider as treasure and man-made signs?I'm not a geologist. Looking at the photos and not the actual rocks, my opinion would likely be that it's some sort of natural phenomenon and not man made.
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What signs do you consider as treasure and man-made signs?I'm not a geologist. Looking at the photos and not the actual rocks, my opinion would likely be that it's some sort of natural phenomenon and not man made.
HMK 959 if you want to start a conversation with SDCFIA go start your own thread it does not belong on this one.What signs do you consider as treasure and man-made signs?
OKHMK 959 if you want to start a conversation with SDCFIA go start your own thread it does not belong on this one.
Thank you for your consideration, just respect the thread.
It looks like an abused hardy or possibly a child's toy.CDS I believe what you have is called a Hardy its a blacksmithing tool used with a anvil and forge, and that's an old one you got there.Good find keep the faith and stay safe.
I still see it as being the replaceable head on a hand held splitting maul. That also explains the mushrooming on the hind end.HMK 959 if you want to start a conversation with SDCFIA go start your own thread it does not belong on this one.
It's all a broken Hallelujah. You can't win here. Keep it to yourself.
It looks like an abused hardy or possibly a child's toy.
It would never work as a hardy because the stem is mushroomed and would never fit in the anvil. If it ever was a hardy the owner must have hated it to beat it so badly.
It's obviously being used as a child's toy by some on this thread. I don't see much value in that but some folks just gotta play.
I still see it as being the replaceable head on a hand held splitting maul. That also explains the mushrooming on the hind end.
True, & I will keep it to myself from now on.It's all a broken Hallelujah. You can't win here. Keep it to yourself.
Obviously not a metal worker. I'll try to explain with pictures this time.View attachment 2133342
Absolutely ridiculous assumption.
I hate to even reply to you, because you just seem set on trying to start trouble, that's all.
You didn't even know it was a hardy until cyzak pointed it out. It's NO toy, but a very old tool,
deteriorated from the elements, soil & time, & appears to've been buried for a very long time.
Had I known it was a tool used in blacksmithing, I certainly wouldn't have posted pics & asked.
I just had the curiosity & nerve to put it out there, thinking it could be... It was used in a manner that
naturally mushrooms where the hammer strikes it, & it's a cutting tool. Nothing unusual about the
wear at all, & no HATE involved, in fact it was most likely loved, a very long time ago, just very old & very much deteriorated.
But I am asking for moderation here, because of your always attempting to be stirring up strife,
with no contribution to the thread topic at all, Just saying provoking untruthful stuff.
Treasure_Hunter, does this guy just get to keep on doing this mocking? It proves or
helps nothing or no one. Never a positive contribution at all, just trying to lure trouble.
Clay, this is a thread where factual denials and fallacious arguments often reign.Obviously not a metal worker. I'll try to explain with pictures this time.
An anvil has a 3/4" square hole on it's face called a "Hardie hole". (or hardy or hardee) Here's a picture of an anvil that shows the hardie hole:
PRO-GRADE Heavy-Duty 55 lbs. Cast Iron Anvil 59102 - The Home Depot
The PRO-GRADE heavy-duty 55 lbs. cast iron Anvil features 20,000-PSI castings. It also features a durable powder coat finish. Making it perfect for metal-working, riveting, flattening, forging and formingwww.homedepot.com
Many tools are made with a 3/4" shank to fit in the hardie hole. This allows many different tools to be fit to the anvil in such a way the tool doesn't move. Metal is then worked over the tool. The hardie tool is not driven into the metal but the metal is driven onto the static hardie tool.
If the shank portion is not square, as in the example photo you are saying is a hardie, then it could not function as a hardie. It would not fit in a hardie hole. Just that simple.
I'll leave it to you to explain why what you are calling a hardie tool couldn't fit a hardie hole.
This is what he was asking, a valid pertinent question... He wrote his observation in a PM:HMK 959 if you want to start a conversation with SDCFIA go start your own thread it does not belong on this one.
What insulting nonsense. When did you make this piffle up?This is what he was asking, a valid pertinent question... He wrote his observation in a PM:
I think it's a good valid point, & deserves to be clarified.
I mean sdcfia and claydiggins who disagree with all signs and don't consider any signs to be treasure related. HMK959
https://www.treasurenet.com/threads/treasure-symbol-help.693315/#post-7172500. . .
I mean sdcfia and claydiggins who disagree with all signs and don't consider any signs to be treasure related. HMK959
It's never on topic with you is it? Always personal insults but no verifiable knowledge.So you justify the sour aptitude, that's the piffle.
I would think if you're that old a man, should have something decently positive to do.
You're the one appears to like to insult. Any of your supposed many treasures Spanish?It's never on topic with you is it? Always personal insults but no verifiable knowledge.
Good luck with that.