The mint mark is located in different places depending upon the coin and the date it was minted.
All coins come from a mint. Casino coins are sometimes solid silver.
No such thing as a 'mint stamp' in dealing with coins. They are called "Mintmarks" for Morgans, all are on the reverse of the coins. The easy thing to do to see one is, in your search box type in Morgan dollar mintmarks and click on images.
Yes, you can buy current silver proof sets & bullion coins from the U.S. Mint.
The letters are called Mintmark's NOT mint stamps. They are used to identify which mint the coin was made at.
The "S" is a mint mark not a stamp, but the value is $2.00-$3.00 for circulated coins and a mint state coin is $7.00
Yes, unless the coin is a very rare year or mint.
The 1999 Uncirculated Mint set has 18 coins in it but no silver coins. Retail value $14.00 The 1999s Silver Proof set has 9 coins in it. The half, quarters and dime are 90% silver. retail value $288.00
The U.S. Mint did not issue a 1979 Silver Proof set. None of the coins contain any silver.
For 1971 & 1972 only, all S mint marked coins are 40% silver. From 1973 to 1976 the S mint marked coins in the standard proof sets are clad coins, the 40% silver Ike's were sold separately but they were included in the bicentennial 3-piece silver sets. No silver Ike's were struck in 1977 or 1978.
By the mint mark on the reverse of the coin, but silver dollar coins with no mint mark are made in Philadelphia
Yes they are, all "S" Mint 1971 & 1972 Eisenhower dollars are 40% silver, but ONLY for those two years. In 1973 the Mint added copper-nickel clad "S" Mint coins along with the 40% "S" Mint silver coins
The only U.S. coins currently made that are silver are American Silver Eagles and other special collectors coins sold by the U.S. Mint. These coins are NOT released for circulation.