FaKe you dork if not to you got to a collector
Skull Island is a fictional island first appearing in the 1933 film King Kong and later appearing in its sequels and in the two remakes.
From your description, this is a known privately made novelty piece. It is NOT an official U.S. Mint issued coin. A real silver dollar dated 1851 is a Liberty Seated dollar. The obverse of the coin has the Indian head design that is similar to the Indian cents of 1859 -1909. The reverse has the denomination of 1 dollar and the date within a wreath. It has no numismatic collectible value.
It may be real. But sientistes will figure it out.
The Frobisher-Smythes are fictional characters created by Jonathan Miller for a performance documentary called "The Body in Question." They are not real individuals.
The Barbaric Archipelago is a fictional setting created by author Cressida Cowell for her "How to Train Your Dragon" book series. It does not exist in real life.
If you mean a real silver dollar, such as a Morgan or peace dollar the thickness is 2.4mm
If the coin is a real Morgan or Peace dollar. The value is just for the silver, about $20.00.
Travis fractured his skull while "dogboarding." He was being pulled by a large dog while riding his skateboard when he fell and fractured his skull. The doctor ordered Travis to wear a protective helmet for six weeks.
Assuming the coin is circulated and has no mintmark. The 1924 Peace dollar is so common, circulated examples are only $16.00 to $20.00 retail. Mint State examples run from $25.00-$35.00
Yes. There are real gold flecks in Notre Dame's current football helmet.
Not yet.
The US dollar is a real dollar. All money is real.
the code is 4654534 to get the 13 skull
Skull Island is the fictional Indian Ocean island that is the setting for "King Kong".
No real US million dollar bills
Easily $100+
Someone that is looking for real skull earrings can purchase them at local jewelry shops. Other options would be to shop online at websites such as eBay and Amazon.