A
Anonymous
Guest
I know that there are no hard and fast rules to how far a coin will sink into the soil over a given time, too many variables.
In a nearby park where I hunt, that you could typify as Cen. Texas former blackland prairie, I am finding coins from the late 30's and 40's about 3" deep. Now these coins have a fair amount of wear, so I figure that they have been in the ground about 50 yrs.
In the same park, I also recovered an '04 Barber dime with virtually NO wear from 5.5" down... been down about 100 yrs.
This equates neatly to about 3" per 50 yrs in ground that virtually never freezes and gets a fair amount of rainfall. Not alot of gravel or rocks either to impede a coins gradual descent deep into the turf.
This is also in ground which I am pretty sure has never been disturbed/filled.
Thoughts?
Skillet
In a nearby park where I hunt, that you could typify as Cen. Texas former blackland prairie, I am finding coins from the late 30's and 40's about 3" deep. Now these coins have a fair amount of wear, so I figure that they have been in the ground about 50 yrs.
In the same park, I also recovered an '04 Barber dime with virtually NO wear from 5.5" down... been down about 100 yrs.
This equates neatly to about 3" per 50 yrs in ground that virtually never freezes and gets a fair amount of rainfall. Not alot of gravel or rocks either to impede a coins gradual descent deep into the turf.
This is also in ground which I am pretty sure has never been disturbed/filled.
Thoughts?
Skillet