SPINK'S BOOK called 'COINS OF ENGLAND AND THE UNITED KINGDOM'....PRICE £25 AND AVAILABLE MID NOVEMBER 2010 FOR THE 2011 EDITION
Gold coins dated 35 BC would be 2008 + 35 = 2043 years old this year
A country of issue would be helpful in answering your question.
Scarcer isn't a type of coin or anything, but rather refers to the relative rarity of the coin. For example, if in 1998, 40 million coins were made of a denomination, and in 1999 35 million coins were made of that denomination, the coins dated 1999 would be scarcer than the coins dated 1998 because there are fewer of them in circulation.
The archeologist would be telling fibs since the concept of a date BC would not have been known prior to Christs birth at best.
A place to see pictures of mid 19th century furniture would be through the Google images. You could view various pictures from various websites and you can click on them to go to the site the picture came from to learn more about the furniture in the pictures.
If the coins are dated 1993 or later, 1000 pesos would be worth about $100 at current exchange rates. If the coins are dated before 1993, they are so-called "old pesos" worth 1/1000 of current pesos, so they would be worth all of a dime. HOPE THIS HELPS!!
Coins are occasionally minted with a date that's different from the calendar year in which they were made. Some examples:In 1999, the US Mint started striking 2000-dated $1 coins so that there would be a large supply on hand for release at the start of the next year.From 1999 to 2001 some states in the EU minted euro coins dated 2002, again so there would be enough on hand when the euro became the official European currency. (Interestingly, the date process was optional and some states minted coins with the calendar years on them.)During the changeover from silver to copper-nickel coins the US continued to mint 1964-dated silver coins well into 1965 while simultaneously making 1965-dated clad coins. To avoid an artificial shortage of 1965 coins, that date was maintained through part of 1966.During the Mint's early years coin dies were used until they wore out so it was not unusual for coins with a prior year's date to be minted for the first couple of months each year.
If communism were to be manifested into a visible image, it would probably be a picture of 3 or 4 people holding equal amounts of coins, and above them the government in the action of handing the coins out.
It would depend on who you mean by "they", but up until the mid 20th century, silver had been used to make coins for over two thousand years.
That would be any Jefferson nickel dated 1938-2003 or 2006-present, as the coins feature Monticello on the reverse side (Monticello was Jefferson's house).
The Middle Ages are usually dated as lasting from the 5th century to the 15th century in Europe. Any house built in that time and place would be medieval.
It is important to verify the authenticity of the coins and the dating method used by the archaeologist. Gold coins from 46 BC could be historically significant and valuable, but further research and expert assessment would be needed to confirm their origin and age.