It's certainly possible. If one was made, it should say "replica" on it, so it won't be confused for a real one.
Sorry no US silver 10 dollar coins were ever struck
No, the last year was 1893.
No. Not a single US coin made the US mint is 100% silver. 1969 US half dollar are made of a 40% silver.
Yes there is a silver dollar with Leonardo Davinci's face on it. I have one.
In June of 2010 the finest known 1794 Flowing Hair silver dollar that is believed by several prominent experts to be the first silver dollar ever struck by the United States Mint sold for 7,850,000.00.
The United States last minted silver dollars in 1935, then reintroduced the large dollar in 1971. There are no dollars for any of the 1940s, '50s, or '60s.
Look at the coin again and post a new question. No US dollar coins are dated 1950. Also no circulating US coin was ever made of pure silver, all were 90% silver and 10% copper.
The highest value today is about $45,000.
no NO U.S. coins were ever made of pure silver. All had at least 10% copper in them. NO U.S. half dollar is worth a megabuck. Perhaps you are thinking of the famous 1804 silver dollar, which does sell for over that amount.
No US Million dollar notes were ever issued. You have a novelty item that sells for a couple of bucks in gift shops and dollar stores. The largest US bill ever printed for circulation was $10,000, and the largest ever printed (but not circulated) was $100,000.
If such a coin exists, it was made by some private company and NOT the U.S. Mint. No coins ever made for circulation were pure silver, and the last year for genuine Morgans was 1921.
The answer is easy - ALL "one million dollar" or "one billion dollar" bills are fake. They're novelty items you can buy in a gift shop or online for a few dollars. $1000 is the largest-denomination silver certificate ever printed. $10,000 is the largest bill ever printed for circulation. $100,000 is the largest bill ever printed, but these were never circulated.