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By the corrosion pattern on the blade, it does rather look like a
wrought iron product of the local blacksmith. As wrought iron it would
have little or no carbon content and would soon lose it's edge as an
axe, or knife. Nicely made, though.

Rod Goslin


On Sat, 21 Apr 2018 15:59:52 +0100
David C <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

> I have found an axe head in the woodlands at Mavis valley in
> Bishopbriggs. The area was a mining village in the 19th and early
> 20th century. I had pushed a wooden peg into the ground and hit
> something that moved the earth. When I pulled it out it was only four
> inches under and was indistinguishable with the rust on it but my
> thumb had sunk into the eye of the axe and I knew it was a tool.
> 
> I have since used electrolysis to remove as much rust as I could. I
> have pictures here 
> 
> http://bearsdenanglingclub.ipage.com/Axe/side.jpg
> http://bearsdenanglingclub.ipage.com/Axe/top.jpg
> http://bearsdenanglingclub.ipage.com/Axe/osmappos.jpg
> 
>  I would have liked to bring this back to life and put it to work
> again, unfortunately, the metal between the poll and the eye has
> thinned far too much. That being the case I would like to forge it
> back into an axe head, knife or some kind of tool as I like the idea
> that it may have been under the ground for over a century and now it
> is back in working use.
> 
> I wouldn't like to do this with any historically relevant relics so a
> professor at Stirling University has directed me here.
> 
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> 
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