The silver coins would be more valuable - as the price of silver fluctuates. The value of the paper is irrelevant.
I would say yes. When has paper money ever held it's value?
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money in the form of coins are money which have a less value like a dollar or a 50 pence as making notes for such a less value would be wasting allot of paper and coins can be updated more easily. coins can also be carried easily.
Yes money is made from paper. But not the paper that they use for fake money. And coins are made from metal or copper....or even bronze. Money is made from paper.
These bills are called silver certificates rather than "paper silver dollars". However the last silver certificates were dated 1957. As you can see from the green Treasury seal and the words across the top front of the bill, you have a standard Federal Reserve Note which is only worth $1.
coins used to be a form of trade. silver coins had higher denomination than larger copper coins. Paper was worth next to nothing. The paper money money was not popular because the paper money just meant that you can redeem this paper for silver. So at that time there was no point to the paper money
The paper currency that could be exchanged for gold and silver coins were known as Bills of Credit.
This is right from their website www.gizandgad.com in the Selling to Us section * Silver Dollars * Silver Half Dollars * Silver Quarters * Silver Dimes * Silver Rounds * Silver Bars * Gold Coins * Gold Bars * Gold Rounds * Old Coins * Foreign Coins * Large Size Paper Money * Small Size Paper Money * Silver Certificates * Gold Notes * Red Ink Notes * Star Notes * Old Notes * Emergency Currency * Foreign Paper Money * Slab Coins * Error Coins * And just about all other money related items
money that can not convertible into the Gold and Silver like paper and coins money issued by Government.
coins=little silver circles bills=green paper
coins=little silver circles bills=green paper
I want customer wrapped rolls
Pounds, Shillings and Pennies, mostly sterling silver or gold coins, (no paper money).
Money is whatever society agrees to have value attached to it, whether it's sheets of paper, gold and silver coins, sea shells, or anything else.
about $1.25 for its silver value as of today. Each day you can check www.coinflation.com. for coins silver value. It looks like the paper dollar is dropping like a rock.
Use copper and silver coins, with blotting paper soaked in salt water. Stack the coins:- silver, blotting paper, copper, silver, blotting paper, copper, silver...etc. Attach wires to the lower silver coin and the copper upper coin. Stack the coins so there are at least four pieces of blotting paper soaked in brine. You can prove the battery's potential with a digital multimeter. It will not produce much useful current, but you should be able to get 3 volts out of it. You could get it to work a digital watch. (make sure you get the voltage right first.) You could also try sticking dissimilar metal plates into a lemon. Try copper and steel, but experiment with different metals, see which is best.
Russia uses both paper and coins.