29th August 2014, 03:47 PM
cause the original treasure trove was put in place when money was produced in local mints and there was concern that people might melt it down and pass it off as ancient.... In this example people might fence off gold they "found" elsewhere and pretend its this artists gold. Obviously they might like to forge it into what ever shape the artist has made.
In this case that the objects are gold and found and I would presume that the objects would still need to be reported to the coroner even though they are not then deemed ancient but that's up to the coroner to decide. The guardian story suggests that they may end up digging this beach forever because nobody will know what has been found. Possible the coroner will know. If its not treasure then this might affect the artist http://www.savvywoman.co.uk/c6-pages/c6s...art_id=597
http://www.money.co.uk/article/1004329-h...-taxed.htm
presumably this artist intends to live for more than seven years and has less than the inheritance tax threshold.
In this case that the objects are gold and found and I would presume that the objects would still need to be reported to the coroner even though they are not then deemed ancient but that's up to the coroner to decide. The guardian story suggests that they may end up digging this beach forever because nobody will know what has been found. Possible the coroner will know. If its not treasure then this might affect the artist http://www.savvywoman.co.uk/c6-pages/c6s...art_id=597
http://www.money.co.uk/article/1004329-h...-taxed.htm
presumably this artist intends to live for more than seven years and has less than the inheritance tax threshold.
.....nature was dead and the past does not exist