Nickel
All US silver quarters are worth more than face value.
Check that coin again. Kennedy is on the half dollar, which is worth 50 cents.
If it was minted before 1982 it contains 95% copper and is worth about 2 cents in melt value.
The gold plating on the outside is worth a few cents but would cost far more than that to remove. If it's dated 1964 the underlying silver coin is worth about $5 as of 07/2009. Dated 1965-69, about $2.25. 1971 or later, 50 cents only.
Old onesWell, yes, but ...Any US cents earlier than the mid-1950s may be worth at least 2 or 3 cents to a collector, but some older cents can be extremely valuable depending on their date, condition, design, and mint mark. The US has struck cents nearly every year since 1793 so there are hundreds to choose from; see the Related Links below for sample values.
Lincoln Memorial cents minted between 1959 and 1981 are all worth about 2 cents for their copper content.
Sodium is an Alkali metal. Elements in the center of the periodic table are transition metals.
50 cents is worth more in the US.
Gold Is Infact a Metal :D :X
Nickel silver is a copper alloy...60% copper, 20% nickel, and 20% zinc. The name comes from its color and appearance. So....it is worth more as scrap metal than as a "precious metal". Sorry!
In 1907 50 cent pieces were worth 50 cents. They are worth more today.
Because transition metals can assume more than one charge, the transition metal ion is named by using a Roman numeral
it was more improved than the early transition metals....and in late transition the perodic table was complety done
Iron is a transition metal. Transition metals can have more than one charge. Iron can be a +2 or a +3 charge.
Originally, a cent had 1 cent's worth of copper, a nickel 5 cents' worth of nickel, and a dime 10 cents' worth of silver. Because the same weight of each metal was worth a different amount, the coins' sizes had to be different in order to match weights and values. For example, silver was (and still is) worth a lot more per ounce than copper, so a dime could have a lot less metal in it but be worth far more than a copper cent. Even though the monetary value of coins no longer represents the value of their metal content, the traditional sizes are maintained.
Most are worth five cents. Five cents in 1963 was, of course, worth much more than it is today after decades of inflation.
3 dimes is 30 cents and 5 nickels is 25 cents so 3 dimes is worth more.