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BigBearRider
Super Nomad
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Registered: 4-30-2015
Location: Big Bear, Punta Chivato, and Cabo
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Quote: Originally posted by del mar | Quote: Originally posted by BigBearRider | Thanks for the reply, Wilderon.
Very interesting. I would think that wooden bows are a very rare find in the desert.
I'm going to go look at the bow at the museum in Ensenada some time. Does anyone know where the museum is? |
the north end of the Riviera |
Thank you! I know the place. I think I have been in the "lobby," but cannot recall if I have gone inside.
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wilderone
Ultra Nomad
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Ted, that's an interesting twist. Given where the bows were - high up on the rocky mountain - would seem a very odd coincidence that they were found
AGAIN (6 yrs. after the 1994 discovery) after a couple hundred years of being hidden in the crevice. I don't remember who told me the bows were
donated to Ensenada, but I understood them to be the 1994 bows. More bows?
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David K
Honored Nomad
Posts: 64479
Registered: 8-30-2002
Location: San Diego County
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Mood: Have Baja Fever
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Quote: Originally posted by wilderone | Ted, that's an interesting twist. Given where the bows were - high up on the rocky mountain - would seem a very odd coincidence that they were found
AGAIN (6 yrs. after the 1994 discovery) after a couple hundred years of being hidden in the crevice. I don't remember who told me the bows were
donated to Ensenada, but I understood them to be the 1994 bows. More bows? |
Was the 1994 cave near Tajo Canyon?
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Pescador
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 3587
Registered: 10-17-2002
Location: Baja California Sur
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Quote: Originally posted by motoged | Good news .....but if any Nomads found the small pack I lost with 2 cameras, chargers, batteries, and other goodies on the road up to San
Javier....please don't give them to a museum.... |
Don't worry Ged, we turned them over to the Antiquities Protection Department.
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BajaBlanca
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Location: La Bocana, BCS
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The museum in La Paz has a wonderful collection of artifacts.
Bows in Baja - verrrrrrrrrrrrrry cool.
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wilderone
Ultra Nomad
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"Was the 1994 cave near Tajo Canyon"
No - it was about 7 miles So. slightly SE of Canon de Guadalupe. I have a source that indicates there was a trip in Feb. 1995 (a year after the Mar.
'94 trip when photos were taken) to the bow site. This might be the trip when they were removed, or maybe just another trip to observe (SD Museum of
Man person along on this trip) and were left alone (?). There are several canyons in the area - one could easily get in and out of 2 or 3 of them in
a day. Would be fun to see if they're still there or not.
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Skipjack Joe
Elite Nomad
Posts: 8084
Registered: 7-12-2004
Location: Bahia Asuncion
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I always thought native bows would be smaller and cruder than these. Was it ever confirmed that these were native bows?
On the other hand, who else would possibly have a bow in that area.
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motoged
Elite Nomad
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Location: Kamloops, BC
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Quote: Originally posted by Pescador | Quote: Originally posted by motoged | Good news .....but if any Nomads found the small pack I lost with 2 cameras, chargers, batteries, and other goodies on the road up to San
Javier....please don't give them to a museum.... |
Don't worry Ged, we turned them over to the Antiquities Protection Department.
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Whew ... I had worried they weren't being fully appreciated....
Don't believe everything you think....
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MexicoTed
Senior Nomad
Posts: 708
Registered: 8-2-2004
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This sounds like a potential Baja Nomad trip to see if the bows are still there? Anyone want to organize?
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David K
Honored Nomad
Posts: 64479
Registered: 8-30-2002
Location: San Diego County
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Mood: Have Baja Fever
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Quote: Originally posted by wilderone | "Was the 1994 cave near Tajo Canyon"
No - it was about 7 miles So. slightly SE of Canon de Guadalupe. I have a source that indicates there was a trip in Feb. 1995 (a year after the Mar.
'94 trip when photos were taken) to the bow site. This might be the trip when they were removed, or maybe just another trip to observe (SD Museum of
Man person along on this trip) and were left alone (?). There are several canyons in the area - one could easily get in and out of 2 or 3 of them in
a day. Would be fun to see if they're still there or not. |
Thanks. There is a lot of pottery pieces at the base of the mountain just outside Guadalupe Canyon... and of course the petroglyphs a few miles south
in Vibora Canyon: http://vivabaja.com/108/
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Rossman
Nomad
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Location: Bahia Asuncion
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I have an acquaintance here in Asuncion, a local, who spends time on the beaches near Asuncion with both a metal detector and a framed screen for
sifting sand. He showed me his collection of things he has found and as you can imagine there are a lot of Canadian and US coins to go along with the
Mexican and Spanish coins but one find was very interesting. He found a bronze Roman coin that was in good enough shape to identify the era that it
was minted. This particular coin was minted approximately 375 BC. Sure would like to hear the story of how that ended up on the beach in San Roque.
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motoged
Elite Nomad
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Location: Kamloops, BC
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Quote: Originally posted by Rossman | ..... This particular coin was minted approximately 375 BC. Sure would like to hear the story of how that ended up on the beach in San Roque.
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WOW
That is certainly worth an explanation....booty from a galleon...or what....????
The history and theories of human migration/exploration are challenged from time to time....recently read one person's view that the Bering Sea
landbridge may not have been a primary route for Asian migration to the Americas due to fact the Ice Age remnants would not have allowed food
foraging....
Don't believe everything you think....
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del mar
Banned
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Location: the cantina of course
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Mood: lil' fuzzy
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Quote: Originally posted by Rossman | I have an acquaintance here in Asuncion, a local, who spends time on the beaches near Asuncion with both a metal detector and a framed screen for
sifting sand. He showed me his collection of things he has found and as you can imagine there are a lot of Canadian and US coins to go along with the
Mexican and Spanish coins but one find was very interesting. He found a bronze Roman coin that was in good enough shape to identify the era that it
was minted. This particular coin was minted approximately 375 BC. Sure would like to hear the story of how that ended up on the beach in San Roque.
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was that or the spanish coins worth some dough?
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David K
Honored Nomad
Posts: 64479
Registered: 8-30-2002
Location: San Diego County
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Mood: Have Baja Fever
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Quote: Originally posted by del mar | Quote: Originally posted by Rossman | I have an acquaintance here in Asuncion, a local, who spends time on the beaches near Asuncion with both a metal detector and a framed screen for
sifting sand. He showed me his collection of things he has found and as you can imagine there are a lot of Canadian and US coins to go along with the
Mexican and Spanish coins but one find was very interesting. He found a bronze Roman coin that was in good enough shape to identify the era that it
was minted. This particular coin was minted approximately 375 BC. Sure would like to hear the story of how that ended up on the beach in San Roque.
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was that or the spanish coins worth some dough? |
"It belongs in a museum!" (a quote from Indiana Jones)
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shari
Select Nomad
Posts: 13033
Registered: 3-10-2006
Location: bahia asuncion, baja sur
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Mood: there is no reality except the one contained within us "Herman Hesse"
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San Roque has many stories of gold dubloons falling out of the sand bank after storms and as well have been found on San Roque Island. This little
secret cove is hidden by the island from the sea so it is thought that the Spanish pirates would hide in there and zoom out when a ship passed and
pillage it and hide the treasures in San Roque....several treasures have been hauled out of there and there were dozens of big holes where people dug
to look....lots of folklore tales there and ghost stories....the ghost of the slaves the pirates killed to guard their treasures!
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David K
Honored Nomad
Posts: 64479
Registered: 8-30-2002
Location: San Diego County
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Mood: Have Baja Fever
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I think many pirates were Dutch or English who raided Spanish ships for those gold or silver coins.
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Rossman
Nomad
Posts: 205
Registered: 10-6-2013
Location: Bahia Asuncion
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Quote: Originally posted by del mar | Quote: Originally posted by Rossman | I have an acquaintance here in Asuncion, a local, who spends time on the beaches near Asuncion with both a metal detector and a framed screen for
sifting sand. He showed me his collection of things he has found and as you can imagine there are a lot of Canadian and US coins to go along with the
Mexican and Spanish coins but one find was very interesting. He found a bronze Roman coin that was in good enough shape to identify the era that it
was minted. This particular coin was minted approximately 375 BC. Sure would like to hear the story of how that ended up on the beach in San Roque.
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was that or the spanish coins worth some dough? |
I actually did research that on the Roman coin and was surprised of the number that were for sale. It is all about condition and I am no expert in
grading coins but most sell for under 50 bucks.
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willardguy
Elite Nomad
Posts: 6451
Registered: 9-19-2009
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Quote: Originally posted by Rossman | Quote: Originally posted by del mar | Quote: Originally posted by Rossman | I have an acquaintance here in Asuncion, a local, who spends time on the beaches near Asuncion with both a metal detector and a framed screen for
sifting sand. He showed me his collection of things he has found and as you can imagine there are a lot of Canadian and US coins to go along with the
Mexican and Spanish coins but one find was very interesting. He found a bronze Roman coin that was in good enough shape to identify the era that it
was minted. This particular coin was minted approximately 375 BC. Sure would like to hear the story of how that ended up on the beach in San Roque.
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was that or the spanish coins worth some dough? |
I actually did research that on the Roman coin and was surprised of the number that were for sale. It is all about condition and I am no expert in
grading coins but most sell for under 50 bucks. |
now thats hard to wrap your head around....a coin made in 375 bc and its only worth 50 bucks!
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MexicoTed
Senior Nomad
Posts: 708
Registered: 8-2-2004
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Hey Shari, never heard of those pirate stories and San Roque. Is there a shipwreck nearby (the pirates had to do something with the ships they
attacked) or has anyone looked for one?
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