It's usually a mint mark, which indicates where the coin was made. For example, on modern U.S. coins, if there is a letter D on it, that means the coin was minted in Denver.
If I understand the question, you have a Sacagawea dollar coin with no date on the obverse (front) of the coin and you think it should have a 2000 date on it? The coin was made after 2008. From 2009 to date, the year the coin was struck in is on the edge of the coin.
Then that coin is a error and is worth a whole lot more than a dollar First look at the edge of the coin for the date & mintmark.
It depends on if it's a 90% silver coin, a 40% silver coin or a clad coin. Also why the date is missing. Take it to a coin dealer it MAY BE worth up to $20.00.
The date and mintmark is on the edge of the coins.
A date set is one coin from each year that type of coin was made using the most common highest mintage lower value coins.
Yes, if it has the word "COPY" on it, it is a fake coin.
There standard date for marking protocols is first of January.
The mint is the place where the coin was made. In the US there are several. If the coin has a D next to the date, it was minted in Denver. S is for San Francisco.
Midnight is the point at which one day ends and the next begins, marking the switch of date. As such, it is not "finished" but rather a moment in time that transitions from one day to the next.
Date marking is necessary when freezing foods. Foods will spoil in a freezer also.
With a date of 1889 this is a MORGAN dollar (1878-1904 & 1921) and the mintmarks are on the reverse of the coin just below the wreath and above the letters DO in dollar.
August 18, 2011 is the date of release for the Rutherford Hayes dollar coin. November 17, 2011 is the date for the James Garfield coin. You can expect new coins in the series towards the end of February and June next year.
Check the edge of the coin for a date.
Only stars are on either side of the date on SBA coins. But if you mean the letters FG above and to the right, those are the initials of Frank Gasparro the designer of the coin.
....There is a date on the coin, the date shows when the coin was struck. Without knowing the date or the design, it is impossible to answer your question.
If you didn't get the date of your period marked correctly after your marriage, you might want to start tracking your period from your next cycle. You can do this by marking the beginning date on your calendar.
If it has no mintmark it means the coin was struck in Philadelphia.