It depends on if the coins are silver or clad and the denominations.
The U.S. Mint does NOT make any gold presidential 1 dollar coins. So none can make an ounce of gold.
It cost 5000 dollar bro
The two terms are not directly related. Ounce is a measure of weight. Karat is a measure of purity. An ounce of gold can be 1 karat or 24 karat or anything in between.
To find a "numismatic value" of a Morgan Silver Dollar, you need to know the coin's mint mark and condition. There are various online price guides. The silver content of these coins is about 3/4 ounce, making most worn coins more valuable for their metal content (multiply the spot price of an ounce of silver by 0.75). In 2011, when silver was as high as $48 an ounce, dollar coins brought in more than $36. By 2018, the coins had fallen to about $12
That's going to depend on the form in which you hold them. 1 ounce of pennies, nickels, dimes, quarters, dollar coins, dollar bills, checques, or gold, all have different values in cents.
The 2012 American Silver Eagles coins are one ounce of pure silver.
There is no 18 Karat gold in an ounce of 24 Karat gold because 24 Karat gold is pure. 18 Karat gold is alloyed with another metal to make it wear longer. There are approx. 31.1 grams of 24 karat gold in a troy oz. A troy oz. is smaller than a regular oz. It would take more than 31.1 grams of 18 Karat gold to equal the pure gold content of 1 oz. of 24 Karat gold.
With those dates, the coins are Silver Eagle bullion coins that are made from one ounce of silver and value is whatever the spot price of silver is at time of sale.
The copper content is worth about $0.02 a piece. It's better to spend them at face value.
14000
The fact that the ounce of something is made of gold (of any purity) makes no difference: 1 ounce = 28.34 grams 1 gram = 0.03 oz
Not much, with the spot price of gold at $1343.10 per ounce, one dollar will get you 0.000744546oz of gold. good luck with that!!!