Using a dredge to find arrowheads?

AlaskaAng

Sr. Member
Dec 23, 2004
300
9
SW Wisconsin
Detector(s) used
White's XLT, MXT Pro, Garrett AT Pro Max
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
???
Has anyone every tried to use their gold dredge to locate arrowheads in creeks in the lower 48? I'm leaving AK this summer and would love to still use my dredge to possibly find some arrowheads not only in plowed farm fields and creeks. Just thinking it might work even if the dredge pushes the arrowheads out the back...it would end up in a pile of rocks that could be sifted through.

I have access to two creeks on private land in the central midwest and would love to give it a try...

Your thoughts?

Ang
 

seriously,i hunt arrowheads, find most of them on sunny oak forests hills with southwest exposures.just where we would hang out without electricity/honda generators.luck
 

patches63 said:
seriously,i hunt arrowheads, find most of them on sunny oak forests hills with southwest exposures.just where we would hang out without electricity/honda generators.luck

Yes, good point! We have a lot of sunny south facing hills and plenty of oak trees...I'll definatly keep that in mind. I also have access to A LOT of farm fields, looking for arrowheads must be great exercise too! Thanks!
 

i have found gold nuggets and arrowheads where they did not belong.indians had pocket spills just as others did.but mostly,look for acorn processing areas,sunny hillocks.fall areas.where would i be in the fall,perhaps guarding the acorn grinders? :hello:
 

I have found them dredging,but I dont know how you could actually do it just for them. :icon_scratch:
 

kuger said:
I have found them dredging,but I dont know how you could actually do it just for them. :icon_scratch:

Retired, hopefully not having to work...time on my hands looking to try something new and have a good excuse to use my Keene dredge after I leave Alaska :hello2: Plus, if the creek happens to be a swimming hole, maybe other neat items would surface :icon_thumleft:

Ang
 

AlaskaAng said:
kuger said:
I have found them dredging,but I dont know how you could actually do it just for them. :icon_scratch:

Retired, hopefully not having to work...time on my hands looking to try something new and have a good excuse to use my Keene dredge after I leave Alaska :hello2: Plus, if the creek happens to be a swimming hole, maybe other neat items would surface :icon_thumleft:

Ang

Now "other neat items",is a different story!I have dredged many a swimming hole and have found an unreal amount of "neat",items!
The difference is,an arrowhead is a rock,and sluices are designed to have rocks "leave",the sluice
 

kuger said:
AlaskaAng said:
kuger said:
I have found them dredging,but I dont know how you could actually do it just for them. :icon_scratch:

Retired, hopefully not having to work...time on my hands looking to try something new and have a good excuse to use my Keene dredge after I leave Alaska :hello2: Plus, if the creek happens to be a swimming hole, maybe other neat items would surface :icon_thumleft:

Ang

Yeah, but another guy on a diff forum said he built a 3x3 box with 1/4 screen that he put behind the dredge to catch most everything except sand and small rocks...it takes two people, one for the nozzle and one to manage the 3x3 box contents; I'm willing to try anything! He also put blocks under his dredge to allow more room in the rear as his creek was only 5" deep...I'm excited to try it!

Now "other neat items",is a different story!I have dredged many a swimming hole and have found an unreal amount of "neat",items!
The difference is,an arrowhead is a rock,and sluices are designed to have rocks "leave",the sluice
 

AlaskaAng said:
kuger said:
AlaskaAng said:
kuger said:
I have found them dredging,but I dont know how you could actually do it just for them. :icon_scratch:

Retired, hopefully not having to work...time on my hands looking to try something new and have a good excuse to use my Keene dredge after I leave Alaska :hello2: Plus, if the creek happens to be a swimming hole, maybe other neat items would surface :icon_thumleft:

Ang

Yeah, but another guy on a diff forum said he built a 3x3 box with 1/4 screen that he put behind the dredge to catch most everything except sand and small rocks...it takes two people, one for the nozzle and one to manage the 3x3 box contents; I'm willing to try anything! He also put blocks under his dredge to allow more room in the rear as his creek was only 5" deep...I'm excited to try it!

Now "other neat items",is a different story!I have dredged many a swimming hole and have found an unreal amount of "neat",items!
The difference is,an arrowhead is a rock,and sluices are designed to have rocks "leave",the sluice

Now that you mention that,Keene has a box like that for coins,or gems?Most coins seem to catch in the riffles.

If you dont have air on your dredge I would highly recommend it
 

kuger said:
AlaskaAng said:
kuger said:
AlaskaAng said:
kuger said:
I have found them dredging,but I dont know how you could actually do it just for them. :icon_scratch:

Yep, I need to work on getting the hookah system...I don't really need it up here in AK as I typically dredge in shallow 1-2' of water. It would be very helpful for swimming holes!

Retired, hopefully not having to work...time on my hands looking to try something new and have a good excuse to use my Keene dredge after I leave Alaska :hello2: Plus, if the creek happens to be a swimming hole, maybe other neat items would surface :icon_thumleft:

Ang

Yeah, but another guy on a diff forum said he built a 3x3 box with 1/4 screen that he put behind the dredge to catch most everything except sand and small rocks...it takes two people, one for the nozzle and one to manage the 3x3 box contents; I'm willing to try anything! He also put blocks under his dredge to allow more room in the rear as his creek was only 5" deep...I'm excited to try it!

Now "other neat items",is a different story!I have dredged many a swimming hole and have found an unreal amount of "neat",items!
The difference is,an arrowhead is a rock,and sluices are designed to have rocks "leave",the sluice

Now that you mention that,Keene has a box like that for coins,or gems?Most coins seem to catch in the riffles.

If you dont have air on your dredge I would highly recommend it
 

AlaskaAng said:
kuger said:
AlaskaAng said:
kuger said:
AlaskaAng said:
kuger said:
I have found them dredging,but I dont know how you could actually do it just for them. :icon_scratch:

Yep, I need to work on getting the hookah system...I don't really need it up here in AK as I typically dredge in shallow 1-2' of water. It would be very helpful for swimming holes!

Retired, hopefully not having to work...time on my hands looking to try something new and have a good excuse to use my Keene dredge after I leave Alaska :hello2: Plus, if the creek happens to be a swimming hole, maybe other neat items would surface :icon_thumleft:

Ang

Yeah, but another guy on a diff forum said he built a 3x3 box with 1/4 screen that he put behind the dredge to catch most everything except sand and small rocks...it takes two people, one for the nozzle and one to manage the 3x3 box contents; I'm willing to try anything! He also put blocks under his dredge to allow more room in the rear as his creek was only 5" deep...I'm excited to try it!

Now "other neat items",is a different story!I have dredged many a swimming hole and have found an unreal amount of "neat",items!
The difference is,an arrowhead is a rock,and sluices are designed to have rocks "leave",the sluice

Now that you mention that,Keene has a box like that for coins,or gems?Most coins seem to catch in the riffles.

If you dont have air on your dredge I would highly recommend it

Yes,absolute necessity.
 

I have dredged several ,even some very nice ones - no telling how many passed right on out of the box. have dredged many civil war bullets and mini balls as well.
 

HI ang, good to see you are still trying differnt stuff, now the question, how do you know where you can use the dredge here my state says the own everything under and above the water. I am sure your crrek is on private property but does it leave there somewhere? I am just wondering of the rules would love to dredge in some lakes up here
 

Arrowhead hunting.
I have family in Prescott Arizona.
They're always showing me new arrow heads they found.
It seems that the area around their property as lots of Indian artifacts.
it may not be how to find them, but where to find them.
I noticed there a lot of arrowhead hunting boards. :goldpan:
 

CAUTION*********arrowheads and other artifacts are covered/protected by the antiquities act. i wouldnt be mentioning anything online about them!! all websites are being monitored! just for your info! the 1979 Archaelogical resources Protwection Act (ARPA) although reading this law can be confuseing at times, they will nail you to the cross if they catch you with anything! the Missouri Department of Natural Resources puts a notice in the papers every year about it when the rivers are low!
 

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It is pretty cool discussion and all the above participants perform well and expose the idea according to what they have inside so its my pleasure to have it....It clear me too what I was looking for...
 

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