Help with wheat cent - odd color

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by marid3, Oct 13, 2014.

  1. marid3

    marid3 Member

    Greetings CT members,

    While roll-searching, I found this wheat cent, 1951, with a very odd color. It immediately stood out - bright and distinct. I put it with a sampling of other cents for contrast (to compensate for poor camera and lighting). These are my very first coin pics, with a cell phone, but hopefully some of the experts here will have some insights.

    It's in very good condition, but with a goldish color. Not the least bit copper colored, rather yellow-gold. Under magnification, it doesn't look in any way altered.

    Is it possible that this is a mint error - some composition imbalance? Or post-mint alteration? Have any of you seen this before?
     

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  3. jallengomez

    jallengomez Cessna 152 Jockey

    It's been plated after it left the mint. Possibly with mercury.
     
  4. furryfrog02

    furryfrog02 Well-Known Member

  5. marid3

    marid3 Member

    What plating would result in that odd yellow/gold color.
     
  6. josh's coins

    josh's coins Well-Known Member

    what makes you say mercury? that there is a toxic element.
     
  7. furryfrog02

    furryfrog02 Well-Known Member

    And people used to mess with it all the time back in the day. My dad used to tell me stories about how they played with it in chemistry class in highschool in the 60's.
     
  8. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    I used to play with mercury all the time as a kid and I never affected me me me me me me me me me meme me me me meme me me me meme me me me me
     
  9. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    Actually if you coat a coin with mercury, it will be more silvery and the mercury will evaporate over a long time and leave it dull. More likely coated with zinc and then heated to make brass. Search "gold penny experiment"
     
  10. KoinJester

    KoinJester Well-Known Member

    Have you ever had a vaccination? Yes.Then you have been injected with Mercury.

    Ah the sheltered lives of today's youth. We were still playing with Mercury in Chem.in the 80's
     
  11. josh's coins

    josh's coins Well-Known Member

    I've used mercury in chemistry labs in college under a fume hood but never in high school.
     
  12. marid3

    marid3 Member

    Interesting - thanks for the comment. That would explain the color better.

    Since I've never plated before, I would assume plating something would dull, or reduce the sharpness of features - when I look at it through a 10x and compare it to some MS coins I have of that era, I don't see any significant reduction in sharpness. Or is the plating so thin as to not reduce the sharpness?

    I'm just trying to get to figure out my little mystery coin.
     
  13. furryfrog02

    furryfrog02 Well-Known Member

    I imagine the plating is thin enough so as not to reduce the sharpness. I just ran across a 1976D plated cent this weekend and it looked perfect except the fact that it was a shiny silver color :)
     
  14. Randy_K

    Randy_K Love them coins...

    Thermisol, the organomercury compound used as an antiseptic preservative in vaccines, was eliminated from use in the year 2000.

    In the 1950's and 1960s we had thermometers with mercury in them. As kids we all played with mercury including rubbing it on coins.
     
  15. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    What would you be using it for in a college chem lab? We don't even use mercury thermometers any more except in selected classes.
     
  16. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    If you take the cover off of some thermostats, you'll probably find a small, glass capsule filled with mercury.

    Chris
     
  17. desertgem

    desertgem Senior Errer Collecktor Supporter

    This was only for new vaccines for under age 6. Multidose influenza vaccine ( such as used in clinics and health deparments have thiomersal/thimerosal still as a preservative. Single dose prepared syringes and other 1 shot preparations for under-6 do not need it. It is safe according to the CDC and others.
     
  18. eddiespin

    eddiespin Fast Eddie

    That's true.
     
  19. eddiespin

    eddiespin Fast Eddie

    That's true too.
     
  20. eddiespin

    eddiespin Fast Eddie

    We were just more advanced than you were. :)
     
    Kentucky likes this.
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