These cost about $3 or $4 in a home-supply store. They're coasters, not real coins.
If the question is supposed to be about the coin's value, it's worth about 3 cents. Remember, in American slang, "penny" means one cent so the term "one cent penny" is redundant, a bit like saying "a 12-inch foot" or a "1000 gram kilo".
The value of this would depend entirely upon the value of the metal it contains. {ie: silver, gold, silver plated over copper etc.}
It's a coaster, not a coin. You can buy these for a few dollars in gift shops. They also have copies of nickels, 1877 Indian head cents, and more. Also note that Lincoln cents are not "Liberty" cents. The last Liberty cents were large cents minted in 1857.
The 1898 Morgan dollar is a common date of the series. For an accurate assessment of value the coin needs to be seen and graded. Assuming the coin is circulated, retail values are $30.00-$39.00. Values are a market average and only for coins in collectible condition, coins that are bent, corroded, scratched, used as jewelery or have been cleaned have far less value if any to a collector or dealer.
If 1 inch = 500 miles, then each quarter inch would equal 125 miles. Therefore 2 and 3 forths (quarters) would total 1,375 miles.
A 1999 penny with an 'off-center' error is worth $3.50.
A penny is about eight tenths of an inch.
Copper has a higher density then silver. So a cubic inch of copper weighs more then a cubic inch of silver.
penny
6/8 of an inch
a penny
1/16th of an inch.
The Statue of Liberty is made of copper supported by an iron skeleton. "179,200 pounds (81,300 kilograms) of copper was used in Statue. 250,000 pounds (113,400 kilograms) of iron. Total weight of the Statue is 450,000 pounds (225 tons). The thickness of Copper sheeting is 3/32 inch (2.37mm), about the thickness of a penny. "
The Defenestration of Ermintrude Inch was created in 1972.
If the question is supposed to be about the coin's value, it's worth about 3 cents. Remember, in American slang, "penny" means one cent so the term "one cent penny" is redundant, a bit like saying "a 12-inch foot" or a "1000 gram kilo".
The value of this would depend entirely upon the value of the metal it contains. {ie: silver, gold, silver plated over copper etc.}
( .035 inch ) for a 1972 Chevrolet 350 cubic inch V8 engine