It's a Sacagawea dollar coin that's still produced today, value is $1.00
It's just a common Sacagawea dollar, spend it.
The Sacajawea dollar first was minted in 2000.
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.
One dollar. It's a modern Native American dollar, and is made of brass rather than gold. Various designs have been minted since 2000. Billions are available - any major bank should be able to get them for you at $1 each.
The woman on the front of the coin is not " Mother Mary" It's Sacagawea, the guide for the Lewis & Clark expedition and the coin is brass not gold. Value is one dollar.
I think you mean "centennial', but in any case a coin from 2000 would be 174 years late for the American Centennial - that took place in 1876. Any small gold-colored coin with a Native American woman and her baby depicted on the front is a standard circulation-issue Sacagawea dollar. Over a billion have been minted and they're the exact opposite of rare.
The coin is a common Sacagawea dollar coin and its worth a dollar.
It's worth a dollar. You can go to the bank and ask them to trade a dollar bill for a Sacajawea dollar. Presto!
Paranoid - 2000 II was released on: Japan: 1 December 2001 (DVD premiere) Netherlands: 13 October 2007 (Dollar Baby Film Festival) Netherlands: 14 November 2009 (Dollar Baby Film Festival) USA: 2 October 2010 (Dollar Baby Film Festival)
Face value only - $1.To clear things up:It's made of brass, not gold. About a billion were minted. It's not rare.It's called a Sacajawea dollar, not a Liberty dollar.It's called a Sacajawea dollar because the woman shown is an interpretive image of the famous Native American guide who helped Lewis and ClarkYes, she's holding her baby and yes the coin was minted in 2000
A lady with a baby on her back is on the front of the gold dollar coins and a lady bending down to the plant is oat coin