TERMINOLOGY
The  following  terms  are  used  throughout  the  manual  and  are  standard
terminology among detectorists.
RELIC
A relic is an object of interest by reason of its age or its association with
the past. Many relics are made of iron, but can also be made of bronze
or precious metals.
IRON
Iron is a common, low-grade metal that is an undesirable target in certain
metal  detecting applications.  Examples  of  undesirable  iron  objects  are
old cans, pipes, bolts and nails.  Sometimes the desired target is made
of iron. Property markers, for  instance, contain iron. Valuable relics can
also be composed of iron; cannon balls, old armaments and parts of old
structures and vehicles can also be composed of iron.
FERROUS
Metals which are made of, or contain iron.
ELIMINATION
Reference to a metal being "eliminated" means the detector will not emit
a tone, nor display a Target-ID, when a metal object passes through the
searchcoil's detection field.
DISCRIMINATION
When the detector emits different tones for different types of metals, and
when  the  detector  "eliminates"  certain  metals,  we  refer  to  this  as  the
detector "discriminating" among different types of metals.
Discrimination  is  an  important  feature  of  professional  metal  detectors.
Discrimination allows the user to ignore trash and otherwise undesirable
objects.
PINPOINTING
Pinpointing is the process of finding the exact location of a buried object.
Long-buried metals can appear exactly like the surrounding soil and can
therefore be very hard to isolate from the soil.
GROUND CANCELATION
Ground  Cancelation  is  the  ability  of  the  detector  to  ignore,  or  "see
through," the earth's naturally occurring minerals, and only sound a tone
when a metal object is detected. This detector incorporates proprietary
circuitry to eliminate false signals from many mineralized soils.
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