No. 2.4 BILLION were minted, and there are no known major varieties.
Yes, based on common observations, Coca-Cola and vinegar are often reported to clean pennies well due to their acidity and carbonation. Additionally, lemon juice and ketchup have also been known to effectively clean pennies due to their acidic properties.
Any color puple is the most common brown is very rare
An allanite is any of a group of silicate minerals which are a source of rare earth metals.
There are many years that have valuable 1 cent coins. For Lincoln cents, this usually will involve a combination of the year and the mintmark -- a small "D" or "S" below the date. You can find a list of retail values for all the different types of U.S. cents here : http://www.numismedia.com/fmv/fmvcents.shtml
Yes, having a birthmark on the eye is rare, but it can happen. It is called an ocular nevus and is often harmless, but should be monitored by an eye doctor for any changes.
Mainly 1909 S VDB Penny, and 1955 Double Die, also any Pennies under 1850 can be found of much value.
Yes, in 1943, some pennies were made of steel due to a shortage of copper during World War II. These steel pennies are rare and highly sought after by collectors.
Nothing in that range is classified as rare, but any British Penny in mint condition from those years would have a modest collector value to it.
Not especially, except for the extremely rare 1943 copper cent, or even more rare 1944 steel cent (both of which were error coins).
No 2009 pennies are "rare" strike, the final design of Lincoln's presidency had the lowest mintage of the series, but over 325 million of those coins were produced, hardly a rare strike. To put that into comparison, there were only 183,502,722 Peace Dollars minted throughout the entire lifetime of the coin's existence and the Peace Dollar is not considered to be a rare coin by any means. So while the 2009 Lincoln cent in the last design (keep in mind, this is only the last design, not the entire 2009 mintage) has a small mintage compared to the rest of the more modern pennies, there are a lot of pennies out there, it isn't rare in the least.
Look out for any 1909 pennies which are EXTREMELY valuable, there a bout a thousand dollars. others to look for (not as valuable as 1909) are 1912 S 1913 S 1914 D 1914 S 1915 S 1922 NO D 1924 D 1931 S and also look for any error coins
how you know any type of juice work on pennies how you know any type of juice work on pennies
Yes and no. Yes, they are technically worth about 2.2 cents in copper value (pre-1982 pennies are 95% copper, post-1982 pennies are mostly zinc and are worth about half a cent in zinc scrap) but they are illegal to melt down and as such you will have a hard time finding someone to buy them. 1965 pennies are not rare by any stretch and as such you should just spend it like any other penny. Unless the penny has an error (or you have a /lot/ of copper cents to sell to someone, or if the penny is in mint packaging) if it has a memorial on the back of the coin, simply spend it.
Yes there are 1831, 1834 and 1837 in high grades....1837 is quite rare 1841 with a colon after lettering REG on the reverse 1843 1849 1856 1860 over 59 (about 400 struck) - extremely rare These are the best known of the rare copper penny dates.
The 1943 pennies were made of steel, and tended to rust away. So most conditions are rare, some more than others. Wartime nickels (five cents) are worth more than 5 cents in any condition because they contain 35% silver (instead of nickel).
at any bank
Based on melt value alone, any Lincoln cents minted before 1982 are worth about 2 cents each for their copper content.