That's the RCM's mint mark. It's been on all regular issue coins and some commemoratives since 2006.
That's awesome for a quarter bin!
They are bullion that are also coins on a technicality. Calling them a silver dollar isn't incorrect, but it also doesn't feel right to me.
It's more likely an honest accident, the two coins are similar in size and it's happened before.
Got two US coins in the mail today. First, this 3c nickel. Nothing to write home about, but it's a nice, wholesome piece: [ATTACH] [ATTACH] But...
I've been doing some research in recent weeks on modern coins. Krause seems to list a lot of coins as circulating that either were only released...
That is a large date.
It is 1969. Iran has used both solar and lunar Hejira on coins at different points in time, which is probably why your converter gave both. I...
Go to a dealer (if possible) and dig through their cheap foreign bin. Grab whatever seems interesting to you. Go home, research them, and go from...
Poland - 1976-MW 200 Zlotych [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
Found the 50 Afghanis at a reasonable price: [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
The date on these goes YDDMMY. Yours is July 13, 1999.
I have some good news for you. The princely states used (and Nepal still uses today) a different calendar. Those 1966 coins are actually from 1909.
For all intents and purposes, the 36 dot cent is the 1913 V nickel of Canadian coins.
Technically, they're tokens produced for the Chambres de Commerce. In practice and from a collecting standpoint, they're treated as coins.
Assuming you mean post-1964 by modern, my vote goes to the 2000-2008 Sacagawea.
I got an order through for a silver at 12:05. Don't know how I managed it. Now to wait for confirmation.
I don't have any examples handy, but I'm pretty sure a few of the Indian states were hammering coins until independence.
It's possible. A lot of the newer, NIFC dollars end up in circulation when someone needs a few bucks.
They still do, it's just issued for circulation.
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