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UK DETECTOR NET IS THE PREMIER METAL DETECTING SITE in the UK and has been in existence since 1994.
Created by Brian & Mo' Cross it must be one of the longest-established metal detecting sites in the world.
The site is supported by the Dealers and Manufacturers you see listed on the left menu. We hope you will support them. Our aim is to assist all those within the hobby and those contemplating joining this fascinating hobby. Need a question answering? then check out the links on the left-hand side of this page.
If you cannot find the answer there then click on UKDN Forum, register and ask your question there. We GUARANTEE you will get an answer !! The associated UKDN Forum is fast heading towards gaining its 5000th member. It is an extremely lively forum which contains all you need to know as a new detectorist or a very experienced detector user.
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£100 Million fortune |
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Leicestershire treasure hunter in expedition to unearth £100 million fortune
A treasure hunter is putting the finishing touches to an expedition to unearth a £100million-plus fortune.
Mike Munroe, from Melton, has spent more than a decade pawing over battered maps and documents to pinpoint the legendary Treasure of Lima.
Now he believes he has found the "X" marking the desert island spot where the wealth of gold, silver and jewellery was hidden 190 years ago off the coast of Costa Rica.
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Archaeologists unearth Neolithic henge at Stonehenge |
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Archaeologists have discovered a second henge at Stonehenge, described as the most exciting find there in 50 years.
The circular ditch surrounding a smaller circle of deep pits about a metre (3ft) wide has been unearthed at the world-famous site in Wiltshire.
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Coroner decides Somerset Roman coin hoard is treasure |
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A hoard of more than 52,500 Roman coins discovered in a Somerset field has been declared treasure.
Dave Crisp, from Wiltshire, found the coins - dating from the 3rd Century AD - in April buried near Frome.
"I've been metal detecting since 1988 and it's the most exciting and important find I've made," he said.
A British Museum spokesman said the 160kg find was the largest single coin haul found in one pot and was probably intended as a religious offering.
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German cathedral bones 'are Saxon queen Eadgyth' |
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Scientists have revealed that bones found in a German cathedral are those of one of the earliest members of the English royal family. The remains of Queen Eadgyth, who died in 946, were excavated in Magdeburg Cathedral in 2008. The granddaughter of Alfred the Great, King of Wessex, the Saxon princess married Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor, in 929.
The findings are due to be presented at the University of Bristol later. A spokesman from the university said the bones were the oldest surviving remains of an English royal burial.
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