These incredible treasures were discovered in the trash
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Sensational garbage finds
All sorts of super-valuable things have been discovered in the trash. Here are some of the most impressive garbage finds ever.
Gold bars
In May this year, an unnamed cleaner at South Korea's Incheon International Airport found seven gold bars worth $330,000 (£245k) in a bin.
Gold bars
The airport cleaner found the bars wrapped in newspaper and handed them over to the police. The owner has actually been identified but refuses to claim the gold, implying the bullion might have been obtained illegally and dumped to evade cops or customs.
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Gold bars
Under South Korea's 'Finder Keepers' law, the cleaner is granted ownership of the gold bars if the owner fails to claim them within six months. But the airport worker may want to resist cracking open the champagne bottles and leaving their job.
Gold bars
If the gold is found to be connected to criminal activity, it will be confiscated by the authorities. In any case, the airport prohibits employees cashing in when they find misplaced items because “it is a part of the cleaner's job to find lost things". It should be any time now when we discover the outcome of the find.
Courtesy James D. Julia Auctioneers
19th-century doll
A toy enthusiast from Rhode Island chanced upon this 19th-century doll in a local garbage heap sometime during the mid-1990s. Though most people would run a mile if they saw a creepy doll in the trash staring back at them, the lady rescued the slightly sinister plaything and brought it home.
Courtesy James D. Julia Auctioneers
19th-century doll
In 2014, the lady's husband, who was recently widowed, decided to see if the raggedy doll his late wife retrieved from the garbage way back when was worth anything. He took it into James D. Julia Auctioneers in Fairfield, Maine for a valuation.
19th-century doll
To the man's amazement, the valuer informed him the object was in fact a hand-painted cloth doll crafted around 1860 by notable Rhode Island toymaker Izannah Walker. Not long after, it went under the hammer for $14,200 (£10.5k).
Rare etching
Cheryl Conroy Warren, a former antiques shop owner from Milford, Connecticut, recently learned this etching discovered by her late father in a dumpster on the Yale University campus 17 years ago is worth up to $15,000 (£11.1k).
Rare etching
Though knowledgeable about antiques, Warren couldn't identify the artist and assumed the piece was pretty much worthless. It was stashed away and forgotten about until late 2017 when Warren made a beeline for the Antiques Roadshow TV series, which was shooting in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
Rare etching
Warren was astonished to discover the etching is a 1951 work by legendary Chinese-French artist Zao Wou-Ki. The retired antiques dealer will use the proceeds of the sale of the etching to treat her mother to a new kitchen.
Mayan artifacts
New York junk removal specialist Nick DiMola had zero clue the old trash barrel he found when he was clearing out a SoHo apartment and studio in 2004 was filled with ancient Mayan artifacts worth thousands of dollars.
Mayan artifacts
DiMola was paid $4,500 (£3.3k) to clear out the space, which belonged to the late abstract artist Clinton Hill. The 2,500-year-old artifacts had been hidden away in the barrel by mistake and labeled as garbage. DiMola moved the barrel to a warehouse where it remained undisturbed for five years.
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Mayan artifacts
In 2009, DiMola decided to get rid of the barrel but, fortunately for him, he opened it and discovered the hidden haul of ancient figurines, bowls and jugs. Given DiMola was authorized to dispose of the barrel, he got to keep the artifacts, which were valued at $16,500 (£12.2k).
Italian violin
Another US Antiques Roadshow gem, this exquisite violin by renowned Italian maker Giuseppe Pedrazzini was the star of the season 17 premiere, which was filmed in Corpus Christi, Texas and aired in 2013.
Italian violin
The violin was brought in by a man who, some years previously, had been driving in San Antonio with his wife when they noticed the beautifully-crafted instrument in a pile of trash, and thought they could use it for spare parts to repair a cheap violin they own.
Italian violin
Thankfully, the pair decided to hold on to the instrument rather than breaking it up, and the man was delighted to learn the violin, which was meticulously handmade back in 1922, was worth up to $50,000 (£37.1k).
Courtesy Cowan's Auctions
Native American club
Native American antiques have surged in price in recent years. The seller of this Otoe ball club, which dates from around 1840, couldn't believe his luck when the wooden weapon sold for $102,000 (£75.5k) at a Cowan's Auction sale in Cincinnati in 2016.
Native American club
The seller had inherited the ceremonial war club from a close friend whose grandfather found it in a dump decades ago. The man had an inkling the club could be valuable but had no idea it would fetch so much money.
Courtesy Cowan's Auctions
Native American club
A particularly stunning example of Otoe craftsmanship, the 23-inch antique club was carved from a single piece of walnut, and features 178 square-shanked brass tacks and a underwater panther motif.
Antique Turkmenistani rug
In June 2010, a San Diego woman bowled over the Antiques Roadshow antique textiles specialist when she brought along this old rug for appraisal. Several years prior, a neighbor was having a clear out and had dumped a sofa on the street.
Antique Turkmenistani rug
The lady's daughter had just moved into a new place and needed a couch. Not forgetting her manners, the lady asked for permission to take the sofa and the homeowner duly obliged, and mentioned he'd also put some rugs in the trash she might like.
Antique Turkmenistani rug
The lady's politeness paid off handsomely. The rug she retrieved from the garbage was woven circa 1800 in Turkmenistan and is highly sought-after among collectors. It was valued at a cool $150,000 (£111k).
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Million-dollar baseball cards
In 2016, a family from the southern US, who have chosen to remain anonymous, were sifting through their late great-grandparents' belongings and came across an old paper bag, which they assumed was filled with trash.
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RMY Auctions/PD-1923/Wikimedia Commons
Million-dollar baseball cards
The bag was destined for the dump but one of the family members checked the contents before ditching it and pulled out seven Ty Cobb baseball cards, along with some old postcards and papers.
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Courtesy Professional Sports Authenticator
Million-dollar baseball cards
The family had a vague notion the cards could be worth something. They weren't wrong. Dubbed 'the Lucky Seven Find', the ultra-rare cards date from the early 1900s and are worth more than $1 million (£740.2k).
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Prized painting
Manhattan resident Elizabeth Gibson was enjoying a leisurely stroll in New York's Upper East Side one morning in 2003 when she spotted a vividly-hued canvas lying on a pile of trash. Gibson grabbed the painting, took it back to her apartment and got sleuthing.
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