Realistic you say? Well, ok, fair enough. I'd actually be safe as I live in a James Bond type undersea lair, complete with shark tank and a coin safe. A trained chimp runs the controls. Guy
I think that my guns and ammo, food stash, water stash and my tiolet paper cases would do me better than worrying about how to protect my shiny silver objects just saying !!
My coins are not protected against nuclear attack. I suppose after the fallout settled, the vamps or zombies would get anything that may have remained intact.
[video=youtube;n2djuNBHwrg]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n2djuNBHwrg&feature=related[/video] This film can give you some reasonable ideas of how to prepare to save your coins. Don't forget to bring some decident
Don't worry. As luck would have it, zombies prefer plastic to cash. Your stash is safe. You on the other hand...
Solved all that with getting prepared for worst case scenario during the Y2K scare. Seriously. That's part of how I came to acquire pm's. if you we're really asking a serious question, of course there are answers..but really, you'd have to have a lot more solved first, before you ever addressed this issue. Hope none of us ever actually need to face such a scenario. Lucy
Yes , it will be protected under the water for 100 years or maybe 1000 of years..Would you like to come on my SUBMARINE? HE HE HE HE HE. HIYA>>> HIYA>>>>Yellow submarine...splash..splashh..splash..LOL
You do not woryy about TONING..because there is no more Third Party Grading Existed on this Planet. Back too Normal Again. LOL..
Hopefully you are far enough from a blast radius that future beings would find your coins and think how much better pre 64 coins looked compared to post 64.
I have lined my secret bomb shelter with thousands of Chinese Cash coins. Everyone knows they are great for fung she, but did you know they can repel radiation as well? I don't have to protect my coins, they have to protect me!
I wonder if the people of Nagasky and Hiroshima were thinking about their coin collections when the bombs were being dropped.
Unfortunately (or maybe fortunatley), I live in an area of the country that would likely be totally obliterated if there was a nuclear attack. TC
There is no way to know, or to even know if they had coin collectors, or if coin collecting was popular or allowed in Imperial Japan. There is one thing that we do know, however. If there were any coin collectors in Hiroshima or Nagasaki, then they must have been very concerned about their collections, as all coin collectors are.