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The info at the link posted by Ticm is correct. I'll add:
The very first ones (1860s) -- such as those made by Eley of London -- had a short brass base with paper/cardboard body. Afterward, in the 1870s, a few (quite rare) all-brass ones were also made. Then in the early 20th-century some were made entirely of aluminum, but those too are quite rare. In summary... from their advent in the 1860s until plastic-bodied one were introduced in the latter half of the 20th-century, the vast majority of shotgun shells has a paper/cardboard body with a short brass base.
uglymailman said:could the base shown w/ your hand gun be .410? Somewhere around .44 or .45 a .410 will chamber. They are used in 2 shot derringer's but I would advise against touching one off.
NOLA_Ken said:Also I figured I'd add here, the reason a .410 will fit in a .45 but not a .44 is that .410 is the internal dimension of the shell not the outer. The outside of the shell is .446 just a bit to big for the .44.
I tumbled it with my pennies to clean it up a little, now I'll just throw it in my brass recycle pail.
What were shotgun shells made of before they used plastic?