I think it's Ionia Ephesus but not sure. There's quite a few similar versions of this but Iv yet to find an exact example of this one.
Sorry. Thought I could help but I'm obviously on the wrong side. Have you tried google images? It might work. Other than that, the Dark one's will be by shortly.
Hello @Paran0IdPsych0. Welcome to Coin Talk Ancients (and Medievals). I'm not familiar with your coin type. The scorpion is interesting. The coin certainly seems like it could be an ancient Greek coin. You can try key word searches, at the following web site : https://www.acsearch.info/ That's what I usually do, whenever I have a coin, about which I want to learn. For example : scorpion swastika However, perhaps it's not a swastika. It could be 4 square holes, arranged in a square pattern. In which case, perhaps the following search would help : scorpion punch Or maybe : scorpion incuse punch
From the style and strike, it looks like a modern fake. The style of the scorpion is wrong (based on other Greek coins I've seen with scorpions on them, as well as fakes I've seen on EBay with scorpions on them). The reverse field is also too flat and perfect - a strong indicator of a modern strike. Caria Mylasa had silver coins with scorpions, but had a lion's scalp instead of a swastika. Caria also issued a tritemorion with a scorpion on one side and an incuse punch on the other. I'm not aware of any silver fractions with a scorpion on one side and a swastika on the other, but then, this isn't really my area of expertise. See this coin of Caria Mylasa for comparison of the scorpion style: