
How to Identify Connecticut Fugio Cent
How to Identify Connecticut Fugio Cent is a step-by-step TroveRadar decision tree built to help you separate Connecticut Fugio Cent from nearby look-alikes or false positives without relying on a single vague clue. The key follows the order experienced field users actually think through in the wild: habitat first, then structure, then season, then the mistakes that most often create bad calls.
Safety Warning
Historic targets can be archaeological resources. If the site is protected, the correct move is to stop and verify rules rather than recover first.
Does the target repeat with the kind of response described as mid-high conductor with mellow copper tone?
The signal profile supports the ID.
Re-scan from multiple angles before digging.
Is the recovered depth roughly within the expected 3-8 inches range?
Depth and tone are lining up.
Site disturbance may be affecting the read, so widen the possibilities.
Does the target fit the era range of 1787?
Historical context supports the find.
Either the site has mixed fill or the ID needs another pass.
Does the physical size and shape match the signal you expected?
You have a stronger relic or coin identification.
Treat the target as a different class of item until proven otherwise.
Is the site one where recovering this type of item is legal and appropriate?
Record the find and clean it conservatively.
Stop and verify the rules before continuing.
Common Mistakes
Trusting target ID without checking the actual object size and context.
Overcleaning coins or relics before the type is securely identified.
Recovering historic items on protected ground where detecting is not allowed.
Pin How to Identify Connecticut Fugio Cent in your field journal
TroveRadar app -- free on iOS and Android