Britons are ever keener on mudlarking in the River Thames

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Britons are ever keener on mudlarking in the River Thames
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Authorities have stopped issuing new permits to comb the foreshore, fearing damage to the area. Hundreds take their chances without one

is everywhere. A Roman coin is disguised as a bottle-top; a Tudor shoe is dressed like a wedge of. For Jason Sandy sorting the trash from treasure is easy work. Scouring the foreshore at low tide, his recent riches have included a knight’s knuckle-duster and a Victorian-era dog tag.

Mr Sandy is not alone. Britons, in growing numbers, are seizing oddments of history that the River Thames spits out. Twice daily, the exposed shore becomes the country’s longest archaeological site. Some 200 mudlarks had permits to comb there four years ago; today around 5,000 do. The Port of London Authority , a public trust, has stopped issuing new permits, fearing damage to the area. Hundreds take their chances without one.

Mudlarking is not new: Victorian scavengers raked the shore for a living. Last century it was a niche activity—a tidal “wild west”, says Lara Maiklem, another mudlark. In the late 1970s thehanded its first foreshore permits to 50 larks who were told to keep their finds private. No longer. Mudlarks post videos of their finds on social media: Mr Sandy has over 90,000 Instagram followers. Ms Maiklem’s “Mudlarking: Lost and Found on the River Thames” reads like a riveting detective story.

One big change, says Tim Miller, Chairman of the Society of Thames Mudlarks, is that women now make up roughly half of all larks, versus only 5% two decades ago. The young also get stuck in, thanks in part to archaeology projects such as the Thames Discovery Programme. Jane Sidell, Inspector of Ancient Monuments at Historic England, celebrates that but worries that some larks are irresponsible: “The foreshore is being ripped away in places.” Archaeologists are also vexed.

Theft is another concern. Treasures must be reported, but 80% of mudlarks fail to do so according to a survey by the. “We’re finding shops pop up on Etsy, flogging things from the foreshore,” says Dr Sidell. That’s particularly bad when people using metal detectors find valuables such as Roman coins. Digging also damages the foreshore. “I don’t dig, scrape or use a metal detector,” says Ms Maiklem. “I just wait and see what the river leaves for me.” For now, the Thames delivers ample pickings.

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