“I found this while using my metal detector. It’s not magnetic, doesn’t spark when grinding.”
“It was bronze cast in the Bronze Age. I donated it to the museum for further tests.”
“A coin I found today”
"It’s a 1361 Edward III quarter noble. Pretty awesome find, congrats"
“I don’t know what is going on. I’m shocked, amazed, and stupefied.”
"What a find if it checks out to be a Cartier gold bracelet. It definitely would cover the cost of your detector."
“My husband found his first gold ring today. It’s stamped 18K.”
"Not to be a downer, but it reminds me of a ring I found a few months back. That one was also marked “18K,” but I did an acid test and it wasn’t real gold."
“Week 2 of metal detecting! I found a class ring. I’m in contact with the owner to return it. The ring was in the ground for 42 years.”
“Roman tweezers I found in Norway. One of my oldest finds, and it’s not broken! 2,000 years in the ground in a field!”
“I found this 10K moose ring at a camping lake.”
“A skull ’pirate ring’ I found in Germany today”
“It has taken me 4 years now of this awesome hobby to have just about filled my cabinet.”
“I took my nephew metal detecting for the first time, and this is what he found. Of course, I let him keep it all.”
“My father-in-law found this on the beach. A Spanish coin believed to be 1500/1600.”
“I just pulled this from my yard in Maryland. It beats the 200 roofing nails I usually dig up.”
“Beach hunt a couple days ago.”
“I’ve no idea what I dug up today. Looks like big scissors or something.”
"They’re sheep shears"
“My first valuable find. Tiffany necklace with silver chain and gold and silver rings. I was super excited to pull this up today!”
“My first gold diamond ring!”
“What is this? I think it’s bronze and it’s probably Roman.”
"It’s the handle from a small hand mirror."
“I found this in the woods. Any ideas on age and what it’s made of?”
"Some kind of an elaborate necklace pendant possibly."
“Last Saturday I was contacted by a woman who had lost a pair of earrings and a wedding ring that had been in her family for over a 100 years.”