Putting metal detectors to good use

ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- Tracy Dahl, a flight attendant for Alaska Airlines, was strolling along the Coastal Trail in Anchorage last month when she flipped her hand, accidentally launching her engagement ring -- a platinum band with a princess-cut diamond in the center-- into the air. She watched it sail over a fence onto the marsh grass.Frantic, she climbed the fence and searched the weeds, but there was no ring. Her fiance said he would buy her another one. It wasn't a person, he said. That just made her feel worse."I just thought it was gone forever," she said. A series of phone calls led her to Dennis Lundine, one of Anchorage's premiere experts in the finding of lost objects.Lundine, 61, has been hunting the misplaced, submerged and buried for three decades, using a collection of metal detectors to ferret out drug dealer bullets in walls, fist-sized gold nuggets in creeks and, in a somewhat alarming incident during a Korean vacation, a 250-pound unexploded bomb buried in the dirt.Engagements rings are his specialty.After clearing it with the Alaska Railroad, Lundine headed down to the spot near Elderberry Park where Dahl lost her ring. She had marked it with a ribbon on the fence. He split the area into a grid, took out his detector and waved it over the muddy grass, listening for a buzz that signals platinum. It wasn't long until he fished something blingy out of the mud. A few weeks later he met with Dahl to return the ring. She wanted to pay him, but he wouldn't take any money. He enjoys a challenge, he said."When you find something, it's just the look on their face."Lundine is president of Alaska Treasure Seekers, a group of metal detection hobbyists that numbers around 115. The seekers canvass snow dumps and parks, digging up bottle caps and old coins, lost rings and keys, wads of aluminum foil and the occasional stolen purse. One in a while, the Anchorage Police Department enlists members to search for evidence. Lundine also has a business on the side doing searches for insurance companies and private clients. "People perceive (metal detecting) is a kind of retirement thing," but that's not true, he said. Lundine is, in fact, retired. He worked for the Air Force and the Transportation Security Administration. But there are people of all ages, even whole families, in the metal-detecting club. With eight detectors, Lundine can uncover an array of metals at various depths and even underwater. On his frequent trips to Hawaii he has been known to wade out to his neck while on the hunt, looking for baubles lost by vacationing swimmers. Waikiki honeymooners supply a steady number of lost engagement rings. The weirdest thing he plucked from the ocean was a set of metal-capped false teeth lodged on an underwater reef. The most valuable thing he's ever found was an heirloom diamond ring, stolen several years ago during a domestic violence assault . He was hired to find it by an insurance company. It was valued at $385,000 and had been dropped somewhere in a sprawling backyard. It took him hours, but eventually, he got the telltale buzzing in his earphones. He reached into a puddle. "As soon as I put my hand on it, you could tell the size of this diamond, it was like a big gold nugget," he said.People load emotional weight on jewelry because often a ring or necklace is a symbol of connection to loved ones, he said. When people call, they almost always have a story of how something was made, or handed down, or given. That's part of what he likes about it. E-mail Julia O'Malley at jomalley(at)adn.com. For more stories visit scrippsnews.com

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Metal Detecting

Thanks for the nice article on metal detecting. It seems that most of what I read in the regular press is negative. Archaeologists (and I am one)and others look upon metal detecting with the same view they hold of grave-robbing. It seems they ignore the service many of us provide to those who have lost valuable personal items in sand, deep grass or in a broad area too large to search quickly.

Over the years, I have returned wedding rings, class rings and even a wallet with a metal hinge with a good bit of money inside to the rightful owner. Most people are simply astounded, a few seem suspicious.

Believe it or not, serious metal detectorists abide by a code of ethics which includes leaving no trace of our work, picking up trash left by others and "doing no harm". I have recently discovered the remains of an old fort in our area dating to the late 18th century and reported it to the local historical society. In return, I was asked to help locate boundaries and work WITH the archaeologists.

It is my hope that one day we can develop a scheme similar to the one in England where detectorists gain permission to hunt, then turn over all finds to a "coroner" who determines whether the find meets the definition of "treasure trove", in which case museums are given the opportunity to purchase the item for a fair value. If not, the detectorist and the landowner divide the proceeds from the sale or work out an arrangement whereby one or the other can keep the item.

Again, thank you for the nice article.

William C Fields
Atlanta, GA

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