A half-life of thirty years, in an attempt to track the dollar's value?
I hope nobody burned their fingers getting them out of the oven.
"All whom agree" is wrong. Does him agree? Does her agree? Nah. "He", "she", "who".
Yeah, it looked like a D to me in the first image, but clearly an S in the second one. That's a heck of a roll find!
Because somebody did something to it after it left the Mint. It looks to me like someone tried to solder it to a pin. I have a classic-head...
I think that's one point of the thread -- there are a lot of "problem coins" that actually still look quite nice.
Remind me, if you would, exactly which non-diverse ethnic group does not "find ways of committing fraud".
Yeah, not sure I'd be able to resist shooting at it with something...
Yep, undermining the value of the currency is always a power that the government wants to reserve to itself. :rolleyes:
Just a note in case you want to protect against me burgling your stuff: dogs love me, but I'm super-allergic to cats, so yeah...
Now, if you'll excuse me, I need to grab my firearms and go camp out in my storage unit.
A storage unit, with security geared for protecting used furniture and toys: possibly not the best facility for storing your precious metals.
Be patient, and keep your fingers crossed -- it sounds like @BadThad has something in the works!
[IMG] [IMG] ANACS gave this one AU55 details, rim bump. :( From these photos, DOUG gave it AU58. :eek: I think the photos reflect the...
That 1797 - she's got flowers in her hair! But also in her skin.
Sure, I trust an MS70 grade where I can pick out field marks on the obverse, even without zooming in.
Grainy surfaces, inflatable stars.
Good call. ;)
The images are pretty dark, and the coin is pretty abused, but I've never seen a 1 with a crosslet.
I think those packages aren't particularly hard to pry open and then squeeze closed, so no, no premium.
Separate names with a comma.