No Buffalo nickels were ever made from silver. 1937 is one of the most common, value is 25 cents to $3.00 for circulated coins.
There is no silver in a 1964 nickel.
...If it is nickel silver it contains no silver. It is rather an alloy of nickel and copper to create the look of silver.
The nickel was never made with silver, it is made with nickel, hence the name.
None
Please don't assume that all old coins are made of silver. All US nickels except special "war nickels" made during 1942-45 are struck in the same alloy of 25% nickel and 75% copper. There's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1937 US nickel?"
"nickel silver" and "German silver" actually contains no silver, so it is incredibly cheap. It is generally an alloy of nickel, copper and zinc, though the exact formula varies.
None. Alpaca silver is another name for nickel silver which is a base metal alloy of copper with zinc and/or nickel.
There is absolutely no silver in that coin.
There are several ways to tell the difference between nickel and silver. Silver is much softer than nickel. However, nickel will shine with a cloth while silver needs special cleaners. Finally, silver is more reflective than nickel.
1937 is one of the most common, value is 25 cents to $3.00 for circulated coins.
Most are worth about $1.00 just for the silver.
The 1941 nickel doesn't contain any silver, and is worth maybe 10 cents.