It's worth exactly 5 cents.
It's an ordinary circulation nickel worth 5 cents. As you can see from looking at your pocket change, ALL current nickels except those made during the Lewis and Clark bicentennial (2004-2005) have a picture of Jefferson's home on the reverse side.
Yes. It's a revised, modernistic portrait of Thomas Jefferson. The partial image is NOT an error.
That would be the Lincoln cent, a design in use since 1909. Also, the 2005 Jefferson nickel.
Alberto Gonzales, 2005
No 2005 Silver eagles were issued from the San Francisco Mint. Look at the coin again and post new question.
Face value.
Buffalo nickels were minted between 1913 and 1938. The coin you are asking about is a Jefferson nickel with a bison reverse, part of the Westward Journey commemoratives. They are not rare and are worth face value.
American Bison Society was created in 2005.
No 2005 Bison Reverse nickels were struck in silver.
The 2005 nickel with a buffalo on the reverse is worth exactly 5 cents.
Unless there's something to make it different from the other 936,000,000 or so that were struck to commemorate the Lewis and Clark expedition, five cents.
This would be very rare coin because the Bison reverse was only used on the Jefferson nickels in 2005 not 2008. Look at the coin again.
Yes it was, in 2005. All four" Westward Journey" Nickles are one year type coins.
It's just a nickel, spend it.
1$
It's actually called a Bison Reverse. The plating was NOT done by the U.S. Mint and it has no collectible value. It's just a nickel.
It's just a nickel, spend it.