🔎 UNIDENTIFIED Flat Piece of metal With Patterns and an Edge

AusTexDude

Sr. Member
Aug 12, 2013
398
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Detector(s) used
Garrett AT MAX
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All Treasure Hunting
It registers high on the AT Max, about an 85 up there with silver.

It has a slight upraised edge like a coin and hatching you can barely make out.

It's 13.2 grams, found in central texas

It's flat like a coin and evenly flat. When I lay it on a flat surface like a piece of glass it has no pivot points, it lays extremely flat.

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It's too heavy for aluminum but feels too light for lead. When I scratched the edge it's bright silver extremely shiny.
 

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It also seems to repel water much in the way concrete does when it has an oil stain.
 

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I must have stared at this thing with a magnifying glass for 2 hours. It feels like silver because it's too heavy for aluminum, too light for lead, wont bend, non magnetic, had some type of markings at one time. Baffled.
 

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I could be wrong, but it just looks like a piece of melted lead to me. I've never seen silver with a crust on it like that.
 

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Pewter? Not sure how the soil in central TX is on silver, but where I live, it comes out of the ground almost as silver as the day it went in - once the dirt is removed.
 

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Pewter? Not sure how the soil in central TX is on silver, but where I live, it comes out of the ground almost as silver as the day it went in - once the dirt is removed.
Yea I never saw shiny silver come out of the ground. I'm working in 98% limestone. It sticks to stuff. I have pulled pennies that were 1/4 inch thick
 

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It looks like a "bug" type automobile side view with some of the detail worn off. But I don't think that's what it is.
 

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I could be wrong, but it just looks like a piece of melted lead to me. I've never seen silver with a crust on it like that.
LOL I have never seen silver without a crust on it. This pure limestone literally sticks to everything except gold. Every single piece of silver I have pulled from this lake has required extensive cleaning to get back to original glory.
 

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OK after cleaning a bit more and drying it overnight a faint 90 has started to show up.

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Some melted aluminum is pretty dense.
Could be zinc.
I've been fooled by some metals iver the years after they've been melted.

As a relic-not passing the value test.
Metal doesn't matter what you do to it the value won't change.

Do a density test. That will help you figuring out the metal.

Lead melts with a plumbers torch.

Put it in a vise, hit it with a 🔨 see how it bends or breaks.
If it looks sparkly bright and crystal looking then I will say zinc.
Just throwing things out from doing tests at the scrap yard days.
 

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