Most Libraries will have such books
Take it to a coin shop and there are books showing coins and their value.
through coins and books and bones and ruins
No it is an adjective showing possesion, whose books? Their books.
It is 15/16.
www.njrarecoins.com is the source for it. you can buy or sell all types of coins easily. one can find the values easily and get the payment on the spot.
Probability not at least 1 head showing is when all 5 coins are tails: (1/2)5=1/32 Therefore probability at least 1 head is showing is 1-1/32=31/32
Go to coin collectors. If you don't find them listed in classifieds or Yellow Pages, you may find them at swap meets. Sell them on Ebay. Go to the book store and find reference books on coins to determine value. Accept the fact you will sell to a dealer at approximately 1/2 book value.
The best website to find a chart showing the value of crude oil over time is oil-price. There people can find everything they need to know about the history and evolution of the chart.
It depends on what type of coins you have. If the coins are collectible coins, that is, old, high grade, and desirable, the best place to find the value of them is in the Red Book coin guide or take it in for an estimate by a coin dealer. On the other hand, if what you have are low-grade, common coins primarily for their bullion value, I will include Coinflation which is a website that shows the precious metal content of pre-1965 US coinage and Canadian coins in the related links. You might also want to check Ebay for what people are paying for the coins you have. Keep in mind that you should never clean old coins because that destroys the value of them.
I'm trying to find the answer...
Google, or a book made especially about old coins.
As with most coins you need to know its date, condition, and mint mark. Once you have that information you can check its value against various books or on-line databases to find out what its approximate retail value is. Then you have to take the coin for a formal valuation by either a dealer or an appraiser. Many gold coins are currently worth more for their gold content than as collectibles, but you still need to check what it could be sold for. Remember that a dealer will pay wholesale prices, around 1/3 less than retail.