Lara_Croft & CoinCartographer
I just found a set of copper coins at the site—tiny, no clear country name, just a jagged mountain symbol. Looks like something from a forgotten kingdom, but I’ve never seen it before. Want to take a look?
That’s a fascinating find—jagged mountain motifs pop up in a few pre‑colonial coinages, but the copper base and lack of a clear script are perplexing. My gut says it could be a small tribal state in the Anatolian highlands, maybe around the 6th‑century BCE, but we’d need to weigh it against numismatic data from the nearby Dacian and Thracian mints. If you can get a high‑resolution photo or an X‑ray, we can cross‑reference the die axis, strike density, and any wear patterns to narrow down the origin. The mountain could even be a symbolic reference to the local geography—think of how the Lydians used their own peak as a motif. Let me know what you get, and we’ll dig into the archives.
Sure thing. I’ll snap a few shots and get a quick X‑ray done before I head back to camp. Let’s see if that mountain motif really belongs to a lost Anatolian tribe or if it’s a copy‑cat of a Lydian symbol. I’ll bring the data to you and we’ll sift through the archives together. Stay sharp—these coins usually keep their secrets tight.
Sounds good, keep an eye on the strike pattern—if the edges are crisp, it’s a minting, if rough, a folk cast. And watch for any tiny stamps—sometimes local elites copy the royal Lydian lines to legitimize their own authority. I’ll line up the images with the database and see if the mountain aligns with the topography of the Carpathian foothills or the Anatolian plateau. Bring it in, and we’ll unravel the mystery one die at a time.