91.67% Cu
8.33% Ni
A copy of any US coin has no true value aside from that of the metals used to make it.
The 1825 one cent (penny) is worth about $5000 used condition and if its a uncirculated is worth about $25,000 dollar but to make sure check with ur local coin dealers.
The US has never made a one cent silver coin. It's likely been plated as a novelty coin or to be used as jewelry. It has no collectible value.
Since copy coins don't have any standards, anyone can make a copy coin out of any material (lead, zinc, gold, silver, copper, etc.) only a coin dealer or jeweler who sees your coin in person can guess at what it is made out of. It has no collector value, the only value comes from the metals used to make it. Most are just gold-plated copper and have no value though.
September 3, 2009 The coin you have described is defaced and as such has no numisnamtic value at all. Its worth is equal to that of the metals used to make it which today is about 1.8 cents.
The 5 cent coin
Coinage is a word to describe coin currency. Coins are nowadays made from various metals.
Mineral are not used to make coins. Metals are not minerals. Metals used for coinage include copper, nickel, silver, gold, zinc and platinum.
The answer depends on the country or region that you are referring to. For example, the US has a 25 cent coin but not a 20 cent coin. The Eurozone, on the other hand, has a 20 cent coin but not a 25. And since you have not bothered to clarify the region, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
lebbo coin metal.
Alkali metals are group 1 metals such as lithium, sodium, potassium, rubidium, cesium and francium. Coinage metals are metals used in coin age to make coins. They are copper, gold and silver.
Australia now has a decimal system. that is every thing works in lots of tenor one hundred. We used to have 1 and 2 cent coins which are now no longer used. The curency comes in ; The 5 cent coin, the 10 cent coin, the 20 cent coin, the 50 cent coin, the $1 coin, The $2 coin, The $5 note, The $10 note, The $20 note, the %50 note and the $100 note.
Yes. The 50 cent coin is commonly used in Australia. As of 2016, there is no plan to remove the 50 cent piece from circulation.
Other than the 1966 coin, the only round 50 cent coin ever issued, the Australian 50 cent coin is a cupro/nickel dodecagonal (12 sided) coin of silvery appearance and is often used as a commemorative.See the link below.
coin
In 1944, the British used Pounds, Shillings and Pence. The British have never used cents. There has never been a British 10 cent coin and the British 10 Pence coin was first issued in 1968.
No.