US Coins go from the Mint to one of 12 Federal Reserve Banks and then to local banks were they are released into circulation.
Although an independent country, the Republic of Palau uses the US Dollar as its currency. Those coins are minted at the various US Mints. Palau also issues "Republic of Palau" thematic collector coins, also minted at US mints.
They're put in large bags at the Mints and distributed to banks through the Federal Reserve System. Please see the Related Link for a full overview of the process.
old coins -yes
Coins dated 1970 were minted at three mints. Coins bearing no mintmark were minted in Philadelphia. Those with an "S" Mintmark were made in San Fransisco. Those with a "D" mintmark were made in Denver.
In 1959 pennies, nickels, dimes, quarters and half dollars weere minted at all three mints.
In the past US gold coins have been minted at the Charlotte, Dahlonega, Denver, New Orleans, San Francisco, Philadelphia, and West Point mints.
It would depend on which mint you refer to, but most modern mints are capable of producing millions of coins every day.
There is no company that mints Canadian coins. The coins are minted by the Canadian government, not a company. The government entity in charge of minting Canadian coins is the Canadian Mint.
Currently US coins are made at four mints. The Philadelphia and Denver mints make coins for circulation. The San Francisco makes proof coins sold to collectors and investors. The West Point mint makes special coins that are not put in circulation and are sold to the general public.
Yes, they're still being minted. Business strikes are produced in Philadelphia and Denver, with proofs for collectors minted in San Francisco.
The 1944 Australian Penny was minted at one of two mints. Melbourne Mint (no mintmark - 2.45 million minted. Perth Mint (mintmark = Y.) - 27.83 million minted.
No. The coins sold by the mint in proof sets are minted in San Francisco.