IDENTIFICATION AND ASSESSMENT

🧐 Visual Analysis

  • **Gold:** Doesn't oxidize. A yellow shine even straight out of the ground. Heavy.
  • **Silver:** Turns black (sulfides) or grey in the ground.
  • **Copper:** Green (malachite) or brown ("chocolate") patina.
  • **Bronze:** Looks like copper, but harder, with a more attractive patina.
  • **Lead:** Heavy, grey, develops a white coating (oxide).
  • **Aluminum:** Light, white, oxidizes into a "powder."


🪙 Identifying Coins

Medieval Rus' (Scale Coins):

Tiny silver "seed"-shaped coins. The shape, the legend (inscription), and the weight all matter. The prince's name can be read on them.

Imperial Era (Copper/Silver):

Look at the emperor's monogram, the year, and the denomination.

  • *Example:* The "Catherine fiver" — a 5-kopeck coin of Catherine II, a huge, heavy coin.

Roman Coins:

The emperor's profile, Latin in the legend. Identified using catalogs (RIC).

  • *Authenticity:* Cast (fake) vs. struck (genuine). Check the coin's field under a magnifying glass.


🛠️ Instrumental Methods

  • **XRF analysis:** Spectral analysis of composition (available at pawn shops or museums).
  • **Hydrostatic weighing:** Determining density (Archimedes was right).