Of course! In fact, up till 1964 ALL dimes, quarters, halves and dollars were made of 90% silver. That means they're worth at least 10 times face value, depending on the current price of silver.
Many older coins are worth even more as collectibles. However in the case of your dime 1945 is a fairly common date among collectors and it would retail for a dollar or so in average circulated condition.
1945 is the last year of issue for the Mercury Head dime. The coin is very common and most are valued at about $2.00 just for the silver.
The US does not use centavos as their currency.
It's a common date, currently worth about $2 for the silver.
Yes - the "Mercury" dime from 1916 to 1945 has 90% silver in it
There is no silver in a 1990 US dime.
If the coin has so much wear you can't read the date, value is only for the silver about a dollar.
If circulated, a 1945 dime is only worth about $2 in silver scrap. If uncirculated it is worth about $3 or so. 1945 dimes aren't rare but are 90% silver.
If the coin is uncirculated value is about $1.25 if not 80 cents just for the silver.
The 1945 nicro S Mercury Dime is 90% Silver Mercury Dime that was minted in San Francisco. San Francisco used different types of punches in 1945.
Most dimes of this date are valued for the silver only, about $3.00
A 90% silver 1945 Mercury dime is fairly common and sells for melt (about $1.60 at today's silver prices) if circulated and $20 or so if absolutely uncirculated.
Most dimes of this date are valued for the silver only, about $1.00