• Discovery of 500-year-old pistol parts sheds new light on Colorado's Sp

    From Renault@1:229/2 to All on Sunday, January 07, 2018 12:57:20
    XPost: co.general, rec.crafts.metalworking, talk.politics.guns
    XPost: sac.politics
    From: renault@google.com

    The discovery of centuries-old pistol parts in Colorado is
    shedding new light on the state�s Spanish Colonial history.

    The spring-loaded arm, known as a �dog� and trigger guard were
    once part of a wheellock pistol, according to the Museums of
    Western Colorado, which has released details of the fascinating
    find.

    �The dog was found as part of an archaeological excavation
    conducted by the Western Investigations Team (Museums of Western
    Colorado) of a site, known as the Redoubt Site, which included
    bits of Spanish Armor and other Spanish Colonial memorabilia
    found near a small fortification, a few years back south of
    Grand Junction, Colorado,� explained David Bailey, curator of
    history at Museums of Western Colorado, in an email to Fox News.
    �After analyzing the material, we discovered there was a dog and
    a trigger guard [that] were from a very early Spanish pistol
    known as a wheellock.�

    The pistols, which could be almost two-feet long, first emerged
    in Europe around 1500.

    Metallurgic tests indicate that the pistol parts found near
    Grand Junction are from the sixteenth or seventeenth centuries,
    making the discovery particularly unusual. �The importance of
    the find is the material is usually found in Texas or New Mexico
    and not this far north in western Colorado,� Bailey added.

    The historian explained that the dog tightened two clamps that
    held flint or pyrite in place to ignite the pistol�s powder.

    �There are many theories of how the material got this far north,
    perhaps the remnants of a Spanish Exploration party or material
    that was traded to The Ute Indian that lived in this area,� he
    said. �Many mysteries still remain about this site and we are
    still working to find additional evidence of why Spanish
    Colonial artifacts would be found so far north and from such an
    early period.�

    The pistol parts are the latest archaeological find to provide a
    glimpse into America�s Spanish colonial history.

    In 2016, archaeologists discovered stones beneath San Antonio�s
    Alamo Plaza that could be associated with the main gate of the
    18th century Mision San Antonio de Valero, as the Alamo Mission
    was originally known.

    http://www.foxnews.com/science/2018/01/04/discovery-600-year-old- pistol-parts-sheds-new-light-on-colorados-spanish-colonial-
    history.html

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From Jim Wilkins@1:229/2 to Renault on Sunday, January 07, 2018 07:30:54
    XPost: co.general, rec.crafts.metalworking, talk.politics.guns
    From: muratlanne@gmail.com

    "Renault" <renault@google.com> wrote in message news:497add65f03f7f65505da095cf62d2e2@dizum.com...
    The discovery of centuries-old pistol parts in Colorado is
    shedding new light on the state's Spanish Colonial history.

    The spring-loaded arm, known as a "dog" and trigger guard were
    once part of a wheellock pistol, according to the Museums of
    Western Colorado, which has released details of the fascinating
    find.

    "The dog was found as part of an archaeological excavation
    conducted by the Western Investigations Team (Museums of Western
    Colorado) of a site, known as the Redoubt Site, which included
    bits of Spanish Armor and other Spanish Colonial memorabilia
    found near a small fortification, a few years back south of
    Grand Junction, Colorado," explained David Bailey, curator of
    history at Museums of Western Colorado, in an email to Fox News.
    "After analyzing the material, we discovered there was a dog and
    a trigger guard [that] were from a very early Spanish pistol
    known as a wheellock."

    The pistols, which could be almost two-feet long, first emerged
    in Europe around 1500.

    Metallurgic tests indicate that the pistol parts found near
    Grand Junction are from the sixteenth or seventeenth centuries,
    making the discovery particularly unusual. "The importance of
    the find is the material is usually found in Texas or New Mexico
    and not this far north in western Colorado," Bailey added.

    The historian explained that the dog tightened two clamps that
    held flint or pyrite in place to ignite the pistol's powder.

    "There are many theories of how the material got this far north,
    perhaps the remnants of a Spanish Exploration party or material
    that was traded to The Ute Indian that lived in this area," he
    said. "Many mysteries still remain about this site and we are
    still working to find additional evidence of why Spanish
    Colonial artifacts would be found so far north and from such an
    early period."

    The pistol parts are the latest archaeological find to provide a
    glimpse into America's Spanish colonial history.

    In 2016, archaeologists discovered stones beneath San Antonio's
    Alamo Plaza that could be associated with the main gate of the
    18th century Mision San Antonio de Valero, as the Alamo Mission
    was originally known.

    http://www.foxnews.com/science/2018/01/04/discovery-600-year-old- pistol-parts-sheds-new-light-on-colorados-spanish-colonial-
    history.html


    Native trade was very extensive. A skeleton found in Massachusetts was
    wearing brass armor thought to be Mayan. http://www.newenglandhistoricalsociety.com/fall-river-skeleton-in-armor/

    Mayan brass work:
    http://www.pacal.de/grabplatte_en.html

    -jsw

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)