Eire 1982 Buffalo and harp 5p
None at all, no buffalo's ever had silver
Buffalo(*) nickels were minted from 1913 to 1938. Please check your coin again. (*)There's never been a buffalo head nickel. The terms are "Indian head" or "buffalo" and both refer to the same coin, but the picture on the back is of the whole buffalo, not just its head
Assuming the coin is circulated, the 1936-D Indian Head / Buffalo nickel is a very common coin, for a coin in average circulated condition the values are $1.00-$4.00 retail. NOTE: No Buffalo nickel has ever been struck in silver.
The coin you describe is referred to as an " Indian Head Nickel " or sometimes a " Buffalo Nickel ".
Please check your coin again. > Buffalo nickels were made from 1913 to 1938. > The first US nickels were dated 1866. > There's no coin called a "buffalo head" nickel. They're either "Indian head" or "buffalo". Buffalo nickels show the whole animal not just its head.
The horn is on the Buffalo's head, on the reverse of the coin.
Buffalo head nickels were not manufactured in 1732. They were not manufactured until 1913.
There's never been a "buffalo head" nickel. The terms are "Indian head" or "buffalo" and both refer to the same coin. As you can see on the coin's back, the picture shows the whole buffalo, not just its head, LOL! Please see the Related Question for information about values.
The first Indian Head/Buffalo Nickel was minted in Philadephia in the year 1913. The coin is actually called a buffalo nickel or an Indian head nickel, but not "buffalo head". After all, it shows the entire buffalo, not just its head :)
None, the first Indian Head design was the 1854 Indian Head one dollar gold coin, the 1859 Indian Head cent was next, then the 1908 $10.00 gold eagle and the last was the 1913 Indian Head (or Buffalo) nickel. The design has never been used on a silver US coin.
Please check your coin again and post a new, separate question.The last buffalo nickels were made in 1938.There is no coin called a "buffalo head" nickel. They're either Indian head or buffalo nickels - after all, they show the entire animal!
There's no such coin - it shows the whole buffalo, not just the head, LOL!They're called >either< Buffalo nickels or Indian Head nickels.