According to the website operated by Numismaster, the 2001 Aruba 10 florin coins were minted with a brilliant, uncirculated value of $75.
Specifically, 2,000 coins were minted. These coins depict seven green sea turtles (Chelonia mydas). The composition of these coins is silver.
One Aruban florin is worth 0.56497 U.S. dollar [USD]. One USD equals 1.77 Aruban florins. The florin is divided into 100 cents.
It is 100 dollars in just a little coin
A square Aruban 50 cent coin equals 28 U.S. cents.Specifically, Aruban money basically converts at half the value of U.S. money. One Aruban florin equals 0.56 U.S. cents. As with the U.S. dollar, the Aruban florin is made up of 100 cents.
The Florin (Two Shillings) was not introduced into the British currency until 1848. A much earlier gold coin called the Florin and Double-Florin (or Double Leopard) was introduced around 1344 for trade with with Europe, but due to issues with the value of gold, the coin was withdrawn soon after its issue. France and Italy both had similarly named coins on which the English coin was based.
The 1645 Florin British coin worth $1400 US dollars in good condition. In a fair condition, the coin can be worth $400 US dollars, depending on silver content value.
At an auction, it will be worth whatever the highest bidder bids.
This will depend on its date, condition, and whether it was ever circulated. A coin dealer will be able to show you the value in a book.
The Florin was introduced into the British currency in 1848 as a tentative step towards decimalisation which was not realised for another 120 years. A Florin was worth 24 Pence or two Shillings or one tenth of a Pound depending on your frame of reference. One tenth of a Florin was equal to 2.4 Pence in the predecimal currency, for which there was no equivalent coin or combination of coins. In the British decimal currency, a Florin converted to 10 New Pence, so one tenth of a Florin converted to One New Penny.
A gold florin typically weighs around 3.5 grams.
there is no 100 peso coin but if in peso coin you will multiply the 10 peso coin in 10
Not much, the old 10 pence coins usually sell for about a quarter or so in the US, the 10p coin was reduced in size and so the old large ones (the size of a Florin) are demonetized, but they still sell for about the equivalent exchange rate in the US. However, I believe you got your date wrong as there are no British (or Irish) 10p coins dated 1966. The equivalent coin minted in 1966 would be the Florin, worth 2 shillings.
£2
If your question is about a coin that has what collectors call a "bitten" edge, the value that it has will depend on the extent that the coin has been "bitten" (i.e. how much design is missing), and also the condition that the coin remains in. A coin that is in close to mint condition and has a significant portion of the planchet missing could fetch several hundred dollars or more. A heavily worn florin with only a minimal amount of planchet missing could be expected to bring less than $50.