maybe a few dollars if you put it up on Ebay for auction.
As above, acid treated/enviornmental damage (buried?)
Yes, and a nice example of it.
That's not a doubled edge lettering coin. It's the same effect as 'mechanical' doubling, from what I can see in the photos....in my opinion.
It's a DD - Damaged Digit It's a contact mark from something that hit the coin in that area. Not a 7 or anything else but MM - Moved Metal
There are many many coins, from all over the world, that have die cracks. Very few of them are 'listed', but that doesn't mean that if you can't...
....my guesstimate - .25 cents, unless you have 3-4 pounds of world coins, in which case they're worth a few dollars per pound.
Looks like circulation damage to me, on both sides.....
It's a 'shifted die cap', that's why Liberty is there twice. The thin capped piece shifted at some point, and it was struck again, then imparting...
More MD
It's been struck through a very late stage die cap - the cap struck so many coins that it thinned out (while forming the walls of the cap) and was...
Yes, the obverse is a mis-aligned die, but the surfaces of both sides are not original.
Everything you see on the surfaces occurred after it was already in circulation. Could be glue or ? on the reverse left side, but in any case,...
....or 'Questionable Authenticity'
As mentioned above, it's from a worn or overused die, but also looks like it has some mechanical doubling, which is not a doubled die.
It is a counterfeit.
Your quarter (OP's) will weigh the normal weight of a clad quarter, within tolerance. Surfaces are damaged - all three layers are there.
Nyet
It's a 'sliced digit'. This happens in a counting/rolling machine, and the machine damages the coin on the inside rim area, in this case the last...
That's called a Rim Nick. It's damage
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