Re: Electrolysis Preservation
I am new to this forum and want to learn as much about conservation of artifacts as I can. My interest came from Metal Detection (I have less than one year at it). I found an old artillery range that was closed some 80 or 90 years ago. There were cannon balls (solid and exploding types) + various artillery shells like on the picture I joined. This range was used during the ACW and a few decades before. This is one of the reasons I joined here: to learn as much as possible about the ACW and to learn how to preserve the artifacts I found (in the clay shores of the St-Lawrence river next by where I live).
I will mostly read and learn as I am not american and I do not have a vast knowledge of the CW conflict.
The believe the artillery piece is a British 1863 Armstrong Muzzle Loading Rifled Cannon Canister Shell 9lb Size and the cannon ball is a 24 pounder that actually weights 25 pounds if my scale is correct.
Jocelyn Savoie
Quebec city
Quebec ; Canada
I am new to this forum and want to learn as much about conservation of artifacts as I can. My interest came from Metal Detection (I have less than one year at it). I found an old artillery range that was closed some 80 or 90 years ago. There were cannon balls (solid and exploding types) + various artillery shells like on the picture I joined. This range was used during the ACW and a few decades before. This is one of the reasons I joined here: to learn as much as possible about the ACW and to learn how to preserve the artifacts I found (in the clay shores of the St-Lawrence river next by where I live).
I will mostly read and learn as I am not american and I do not have a vast knowledge of the CW conflict.
The believe the artillery piece is a British 1863 Armstrong Muzzle Loading Rifled Cannon Canister Shell 9lb Size and the cannon ball is a 24 pounder that actually weights 25 pounds if my scale is correct.
Jocelyn Savoie
Quebec city
Quebec ; Canada
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