Ronstar
Well-known member
Took the pendant to the Catholic Church and the helpful folks there took a look and tried to help see if the initials and date could be tracked. Seems the Catholics have a nationwide data base for these type items which shows communion or confirmation dates etc. we thought with initials and a date engraved it was highly possible to get it reunited, nope. Unable to match it up….
A couple opinions on the metal went from gold plated brass to bronze to whatever. In my experience those can discolor and or where it broke off the chain on top would have revealed the base metal and some rust. It is slightly larger than a nickel but weighed in at 4.52 grams, it is very thin as well. Decided to take it to a local reputable jeweler and explained the back story, it was 6-7” deep and what you see is how it was recovered. They looked at it under a loupe and then said to wait a couple minutes and disappeared. The young girl assistant came back and said “well I have good news, its solid gold!”
I thought she meant 24k and I think seeing the pale look on my face was enough to quickly then say it was 14k pure with no base metal. She told me the owner looked at it under a high power microscope and another instrument and confirmed the metal. I left with a pretty good smile and the blood slowly coming back in my face!!!
Someone, at some time was wearing it when the pendant broke off and probably didn’t know it until sometime later. It’s possible too that they didnt report it as lost to the Student Housing Office as they have no record of it either (if over 20 yrs they delete those reports so at that depth most likely way beyond 20 yrs). The clues are there but I found it past its report life, if anyone has any other ideas on researching please let me know.
A couple opinions on the metal went from gold plated brass to bronze to whatever. In my experience those can discolor and or where it broke off the chain on top would have revealed the base metal and some rust. It is slightly larger than a nickel but weighed in at 4.52 grams, it is very thin as well. Decided to take it to a local reputable jeweler and explained the back story, it was 6-7” deep and what you see is how it was recovered. They looked at it under a loupe and then said to wait a couple minutes and disappeared. The young girl assistant came back and said “well I have good news, its solid gold!”
I thought she meant 24k and I think seeing the pale look on my face was enough to quickly then say it was 14k pure with no base metal. She told me the owner looked at it under a high power microscope and another instrument and confirmed the metal. I left with a pretty good smile and the blood slowly coming back in my face!!!
Someone, at some time was wearing it when the pendant broke off and probably didn’t know it until sometime later. It’s possible too that they didnt report it as lost to the Student Housing Office as they have no record of it either (if over 20 yrs they delete those reports so at that depth most likely way beyond 20 yrs). The clues are there but I found it past its report life, if anyone has any other ideas on researching please let me know.