Double-dated coins were minted in huge numbers as part of the 1967 Centennial celebration. In average condition a 1¢ coin from those issues would worth less than a dime.
Presumably your coin carries the double date 1867-1967, which means it was minted for the Canadian Centennial. In average condition it has no added value. In EF-40, it retails for only 15 to 20 cents.To explain, the first Canadian coins called nickels were minted in 1922 and none have ever contained silver. Five-cent pieces issued before that year were tiny coins made of 80% silver but none were minted in 1867, so you could not have an 1867 nickel.
No. find the website for Calgary Coins. There they will tell you the metal content and a VERY brief history of Canadian coins. 1968 was the last year silver coins were minted for circulation, and then only for part of the year and in debased .500 fine alloy.
The Krugerrand coin was minted in 1967 making the earliest coins about 44 years old.
It's silver if it was minted in or before 1967.
There are no such things as 1967 Canadian Olympic coins. Perhaps you are thinking of Centennial coins?
Quite simply, there were no US dollar coins minted that year.
No way of supplying an answer. Hundreds of coins fit this description.
Such a coin does not exist. There were no Australian 1967 50 cent coins minted.
None of the US Mints placed mint marks on their coins from 1965 through 1967. Even if there is a way to know how many were minted in Denver it wouldn't matter because there is no way to know which coins they are.
Which Canadian coins??? 1967 dollar ---- Canadian Goose 1967 cent ---- Dove Loonie ---- Loon
None. All U.S. coins dated 1965-1966 or 1967 were struck at the Philadelphia Mint.
Please check again and post a new question. The last silver US $1 coins were minted in 1935 and no $1 coins were minted again until the copper-nickel Ike dollars of 1971.