willong
Posts: 122
Joined: 4/22/2009 From: Port Angeles, WA Status: offline
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Nice video Rick. I notice in one of your replies that you mention the "crunch" feel or sound. I would add that sometimes one can actually feel or hear a "tink" when the probe tip actually contacts a bottle. I haven't done as much probing as you privy diggers, but when I used to locate a backwoods or rural dump, I would gently probe about to delineate the boundaries of the dump. I could definitely feel (and often hear) the crunch of decomposed old cans, and the tink of glass when I contacted a whole bottle. Backwoods dumps were often over an embankment or into a ravine; so, I always sought the lower boundary of the dump in order to avoid covering up bottles with overburden and spoils removed while excavating uphill. Another note; I had a friend who used to probe the muck bottom of a marsh by Port Townsend, WA, while knee or even chest-deep in the water. There was no use layer, per se, he strictly located individual bottles by the "tink" sound. Are there any members out there who do the same in southern swamps, or even in Central America (such as in the Canal Zone)? Do any forum members have success locating deep dumps and privy pits with metal detectors? I’ve located old mill sites and logging camps in Washington where I’ve been unable to locate the dumps. Other visible relics strewn about such as broken axe heads and saw blades, but an absence of glass and tin can residue, indicate that these are not sites that have been dug out or cleaned up—I suspect that subsequent earth-moving activity, even log yarding from two successive harvests, have covered over the dumpsites.* Water and wind erosion can also cover old dumps with drifted sand and mud flows. I’d like to get a metal detector for locating dump contents that could be anywhere from 2’ to 8’ down—any suggestions? Will * I’ve located a couple of old mill sites where waste cedar slabs trimmed off of shingle bolts have literally filled in small gullies—not having a backhoe to dig out an entire ravine, I’m wondering if a metal detector would determine if trash from the cookhouse was somewhere under that mess? Even after a hundred years, a probe will not penetrate such material.
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