The nickel has an image of Thomas Jefferson.
5 cent coin: Brass-clad nickel 10 cent coin: Brass-clad nickel 50 cent coin: nickel-clad copper dollar coin: nickel-clad copper.
The nickel 5 cents coin is made of a combination of copper and nickel, with 75% copper and 25% nickel. It gives the coin its characteristic silver color.
The USA refers to their 5 cent coin as a Nickel. Nickel (Ni) is an element with the atomic number 28.
Australia has never produced a "nickel" coin.
Assuming American coinage, the two coins would be a 25 cent coin and a 5 cent coin. Assuming non-American coins, one is not a 10 cent coin, but the other one is. The other coin being a 20 cent coin.
You have to use a quarter and a nickel otherwise it's impossible.An Explanation ...This is a common brain teaser. If one coin isn't a nickel, it's the quarter. The other coin is the nickel.
A nickel is a five-cent United States coin. A dime is a ten-cent coin. Therefore, a nickel is half of a dime.
Australia does not have a "nickel" coin.
NICKEL
The one is a quarter and the other one is a nickel
Thomas Jefferson is represented on the United States nickel coin.
U.S. cents were never struck in nickel. If your coin is nickel- or silver-colored it was plated. That makes it an altered coin with no collector value.