The word "still" isn't applicable to this question. The coins have been minted every year since 2000 and are legal tender anywhere in the US. The same applies to the Presidential Dollar series that started in 2007.
No.
Technically no; you are supposed to change your dollars into pesos. However, many shops along the border will accept dollars. Ask first.
Sacajawea dollars aren't gold and they aren't plated. They're made of a metal called manganese brass, and the outer layers are mechanically bonded to a copper core. About a billion Sacajawea dollars were made in 2000 so unless your coin is either a proof or uncirculated one, it's still only worth $1.
Susan B. Anthony and Sacajawea, though only the Sacajawea design is still produced.
The US Mint used to produce a series of $1 coins it called the Sacajawea dollar. Now, it produces a very similar series of coins it calls Native American dollars. The woman depicted on both is nearly identical and many people assume that Sacajawea coins are still being produced. In fact, the government says that the woman depicted on the current series is not Sacajawea, but a generic Native American woman.
Yes. The Illinois Fighting Illini are still competing.
the Illinois capitol is still springfield.
Yes, "one thousand one hundred" and "eleven hundred" are talking about the same number: 1100.
Here's a basic comparison:Both coins have the same diameter (26.5 mm), weight (8.1 gm) and electrical characteristics so that they're compatible in vending machines, transit fareboxes, coin sorters. and so on.Anthony dollars were made of the same clad composition still used in dimes, quarters, and halves: outer layers of copper-nickel bonded to a pure copper core. Sacajawea dollars have outer layers of manganese brass bonded to a pure copper core.Anthony dollars have reeded (grooved) edges. Sacajawea dollars have smooth edges on coins made in 2000-2008, and lettered edges since then.While neither coin has been a rousing success due to continued production of $1 bills, Sacajawea dollars are far easier to distinguish from other coins and do circulate in some parts of the country. Anthony dollars were by all accounts a failure, primarily because of their poor design and similarity to quarters in size and color.Also, note that Sacajawea (or Sacagawea) dollars aren't exactly new, as they've been issued since 2000.
It's still worth one dollar.
It's still worth one dollar.
None of the SACAGAWEA dollars regardless of date or mintmark struck for general circulation have more than face value. Only proof and uncirculated collectors coins sold from the Mint have premiums.