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TThe pair discovered the medieval ‘piggy bank’ containing almost the whole range of English currency circulating in the late 1300’s, including a substantial number of large gold and silver coins, whilst out on their weekly Sunday morning treasure hunt. Brian told the Enquirer: “We’ve been metal detecting on this same field for over 25 years so we weren’t expecting to find anything. We’d been out for two hours and Nick was back in the car ready to go when I got a ‘beep’.
The newspaper report states that Brian said he'd dug down "about a foot and a half" and then started digging out a large number of coins from the soil, the story goes on to assert that he was "ready to go home before his friend Nick joined in uncovering a further haul of gold coins on the edge of the hole". So at what stage should the pair have stopped digging and called the archaeologists in, before or after they got the earth stripping machinery in? What was the context of deposition of this find? Is the depth of "a foot and a half" (0.45m) within the ploughsoil in this field, or below it?
Phil Harrison, 'Medieval coin haul worth thousands dug up in Corringham', Essex Enquirer 14/10/2011
Vignette: The Corringham I remember.
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