Not all examples of the 1990 Walking Liberty Dollar have mint marks. However, if it does, it will be located to the right of the date. These coins are often misidentified, as the mint mark, (s,D, or none for Philadelphia) are very small and nearly impossible to see without a loop, and bright light.
The mint mark position on all Lincoln cents is the same, below the date:
No mint mark = Philadelphia (cents are the only coins that don't currently use the "P" mint mark)
D = Denver
S = San Francisco (1909-1955 and 1968-1974)
The mint mark is below the date.
$800 to $41,000 depending upon the condition of the coin.
The mint mark does not determine the value of a coin. If you have a penny and want to know what it is worth, please submit a new question and include the date on your penny as well as the mint mark.
a penny
2002 mint sets in original package have a value of $15.00 to $20.00. The penny has never had a P mint mark.
Directly below the date. If there is no mint mark, then it's from Philadelphia.
If a penny has no mint mark, it typically means it was produced by the Philadelphia Mint. Mint marks indicate where a coin was minted, and coins from the Philadelphia Mint, the oldest U.S. Mint facility, do not have a mint mark.
If there is no mint mark the coin was made at the Philadelphia mint. It was not until 1979 that the "P" appeared on the penny. "P" mintmarks have NEVER been used on pennies.
Yes. $1.25 if there is no mint mark, $7.75 if it has a D mint mark, and $132.50 if it has a S mint mark.
no
A 1914 penny with no mint mark is worth about $1.50.
The "D" is the mint mark, it stands for the Denver Mint