None minted for circulation since 1968. Later proof coins and some commemorative issues have been made in .8 silver.
The Mercury Dime contains: 0.900 silver and 0.100 cooper. The net weight of the pure silver in this coin is: 0.07234 oz.
No. A dime is a mixture of metals, not a compound, nor does a dime contain any ionic compounds.
It is 90% silver and contains a little over 2 grams of silver.
Flowing Hair, Draped Bust, and Gobrecht silver dollars contain .8924 oz. Pure silver. Trade dollars contain .7874 oz. pure silver Liberty Seated , Morgan and Peace dollars contain .77344 oz. pure silver. Eisenhower silver dollars contain .3161 oz pure silver . American Silver Eagles contain a full oz. pure silver
For U.S. dimes and quarters, anything dated before 1965 is silver.
Canadian dimes minted between 1920 and 1966 contain 80% silver and 20% copper.
G
A 1956 Canadian dime is worth approximately 2 dollars.
Canadian silver dollars contain 0.6 troy ounces of silver.
Canadian silver dollars contain 0.6 troy ounces of silver.
80% silver, 20% copper, with an original weight of 2.33 grams.
If you're referring to a 1965 American dime, none. All 1965 and later US dimes and quarters, and 1971 and later halves, are made of a 3-layer "sandwich" containing only copper and nickel. They don't contain any silver, so they don't have any extra value unless you have an uncirculated or proof coin in its original packaging. If you're referring to a 1965 Canadian dime, it contains 1.864 gm of silver. These coins weighed 2.33 gm and were 80% silver.
Any Canadian dime dated 1967 or earlier is silver. Then some in 1968 were 50% silver, others were pure nickel. The nickel ones are magnetic.
About 1 mm. You can always use a ruler.
No, no US dimes dated 1976 contain any silver at all.
Dime minted before 1965 contain 90% silver. With a total weight of 2.5 grams, that makes 2.25 grams of silver per dime.
No. The last year for silver in Canadian dimes and quarters was 1968.