


Mud larking.
For those of you who have never heard of this before, please let me explain.
If you are lucky enough to live near to a mouth of an estuary, you can go mud larking every time the tide has receded, The tide causes sand and mud to move, and when the tide is out, many objects or mostly, part/broken objects are uncovered and can be easily picked up.
You need to be very careful sometimes as the mud/water mix may not sustain you walking on it and you can sink very quickly.
The above item was found at the mouth of the River Exe, in Exmouth, Devon, South West England
As you can clearly see, there is a Maltese cross on the underside of the curved base, but no other markings at all. When measuring the radius from the central glass blob in the middle of the cross to the outside, it works out that the diameter is 96mm.
When searching Google, I have come across quite a few bottles, which have the Maltese cross on the side of the bottle and some have words and numbers, but I cannot find any photographs with the cross on the base. I still believe it is Maltese, but unsure if it is a jar or a bottle.
The internally curved base reminds me of modern day wine bottles.
Therefore, my question is:- Does anyone know anything about this item



