The newer ones no but the older ones mabe worth a little not much but a little
You actaully get animals by getting coins. I don't know how much coins you need for each animal, but you do get different animals as you get more coins.
Sacagawea.
She is brave, kind, and she is an Indian.
7
Gold changes in value every day, so your coins will also change in value. The value also depends on the condition of the coin. Your first coin is a 30.1 millimeters Venezuelan 60 Bolivares featuring 16th century Indian chief Mara. It should weigh 22.2 grams and would contain .6424 of an ounce of gold. (http://en.allexperts.com/q/Coin-Collecting-2297) http://www.coininfo.com may be another useful site. sexy chick xx
One dollar each.
Sacagawea silver dollar coins were not minted in 1979. The first year of issue for Sacagawea dollar coins was 2000, and they are made of a copper-nickel clad composition, not silver.
All so-called "golden" $1 coins (both Sacagawea and Presidential Portraits) are standard circulation coins worth one dollar. They do not contain any gold and are not rare.
The 2005 Sacagawea dollar was released for circulation so it's just face value. Only Uncirculated or Proof coins are worth more. NOTE: None of the coins contain any gold.
Sacagawea dollar coins are common and worth face value.
1 dollar. These coins are made of brass not gold. They are also very very common.
Sacagawea and Presidential dollar coins are legal tender anywhere in the US and should be accepted in payment by any store.The only limitations on their use might be vending machines that haven't yet been modified to accept dollar coins.
I think it is the same value, but I may be wrong. There is no "E" mint mark on any U.S. coin. Your coin was altered after it left the mint. In any case all circulation-issue Sacajawea dollars are worth only face value - $1.
Value depends on which of the three 2008 dated dollar coins it is? Presidential, Sacagawea or Silver Eagle. Post new Question.
None of the SACAGAWEA dollars regardless of date or mintmark are made of gold. The U.S. does not use any gold coins for general circulation. It's just a dollar.
2000
If you mean a Sacagawea or Presidential dollar, it has no gold and is worth $1.00. The U.S. has not used any gold coins for circulation since 1933.