To: yankeedame
There is alot of history in Britian. It took the Athens subway about 20 years to go 3 miles - every 10 feet they had to stop and investigate all the artificats that were found...
2 posted on
03/11/2004 9:14:19 AM PST by
2banana
To: 2banana
There is alot of history in Britian. It took the Athens subway about 20 years to go 3 miles - every 10 feet they had to stop and investigate all the artificats that were found...This is every treasure hunter's dream! Incidentally, it took Boston 14 years and 15 billion dollars to go 2 miles underground - but that has nothing to do with artifacts.
To: 2banana
"they could still be ruled as being property of the state."
They will.
"It is possible somebody put them there and forgot about them, or never intended for them to be found."
Or never intended them to be found and died before they recovered them?
"The coroner can rule whether they are the finder's treasure or not."
Shucks, I can just see a "public" servant ruling in favor of the "public". He should have told nobody and sold them one at a time. The very fact that they were buried in the ground means that the depositer "never intended for them to be found".
"What determines this is if the coins were buried there intentionally or lost".
When coins get "lost" they usually find a pot and plant themselves in the ground.
Interesting. If I ever find anthing of value, the last thing that I will do is tell my government. The would claim first "dibs" and all I would be left with is the broken pottery.
Blessings, Bobo
17 posted on
03/11/2004 9:26:10 AM PST by
bobo1
To: 2banana
What Ken should have done was find 20,000; er, 5,000 coins. And kept his cut before the Gov't comes and 'gets theirs'.
27 posted on
03/11/2004 9:34:26 AM PST by
Swanks
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