No U.S. coins are pure silver. Silver is so soft it would wear out quickly so the metal was alloyed with copper.
See the Related Question for more details.
Well.. it all depends on how much you want to sell each dime bag for. Lets say.. each dime bag it worth.. 8 bucks. just see how many dime bags you have. I'd say you have yourself a god hunk of cash though.
seventy bucks
About $3 for its silver content.
Likely not as much as you'd like, but it's not like pure silver that can be sold for the value of silver. But I think it would depend on a number of factors such as what the item is, the quality, how old it is, how much wear is shown, and where and how you're selling it. Even who owned it could affect the value.
The date being larger than the IN GOD WE TRUST is normal -- no added value. It looks like the category is in Canadian coins. That being, the 1969 dime that has a slightly larger date than other 1969 dimes (search for images to compare) is extremely rare, and worth thousands, even with wear. It's worth is about $10,000 to $15,000 if it's in good shape.
The U.S. Mint did not issue a Mercury Dime in 1910.
It's just a silver Roosevelt dime worth about a dollar
It isn't a liberty dime, it is a Roosevelt dime, it isn't silver and only worth 10 cents.
It's currently worth about $2 for the silver.
0.10 USD
A 1942 Mercury silver dime could be worth between $2.00 and $30.00 depending on its condition and grade.
The value is about $2.00 just for the silver.
A 1963 Roosevelt dime is very common. Most are only valued for the silver, about $2.00.
Mine is worth about $0.90, and so is yours.
It's worth about $2.30 for its silver content.
A 1956 Canadian dime is worth approximately 2 dollars.
no such thing.