Thomas Jefferson is represented on the United States nickel coin.
yes, on a nickel
nickel
NICKEL
A cylinder would fit the description because a coin is like a squashed cylinder
Thomas Jefferson appears on the nickel a five cent currency. Thomas Jefferson our third president represented Virginia for the currency.
The echidna, a spiky monotreme (egg-laying mammal), is represented on Australia's five cent coin.
Any reproduction of a US coin that is the same size and has the appearance of the real coin is required to have the word "copy" on it someplace where it can be easily seen. This is done to prevent the coin being represented as authentic
The probability of rolling any number on a cube can be represented by the formula: X / the number of variables. Since any cube has 6 sides, the probability of rolling any of the numbers 1 through 6 on the cube, can be represented by the formula: X = 1 / 6 = 16.66% The odds or probability of flipping a coin and landing it on either side can be represented by X = the requested result / the number of variables = 1 /2 = 50% Therefore, given the two questions of probability, there is a much greater chance of landing a coin on "tails" rather than rolling a "4".
The letter "D" under the date of a penny is the mintmark which indicates where the coin was minted. There are 4 operating mints in the USA. One , represented by the mintmark "D" is in Denver, Colorado. Another, represented by the mintmark "S" is in San Francisco, California. Another, represented by the mintmark "W" is in West Point, New York. The 4th, represented by the mintmark "P" is in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. You will find these mintmarks on all coins struck in the USA today with the exception of the pennies which are produced at the Philadelphia mint. You will find no pennies with a mintmark "P". You will also find no coin minted in 1965, 1966 and 1967 with a mintmark. This is because during those years, to discourage coin collecting which some blamed for a coin shortage, none of the mint facilities in the US placed mintmarks on the coins they produced. This practice ended in 1967 and in 1968 mintmarks were again placed on US coins.
$2 - $32 depending upon the condition of the coin and the mint mark and the state being represented.
Please check your coin again and post a new, separatequestion. There's no such coin for two reasons:(1) No US dollar coins were struck from 1905 to 1920 inclusive(2) There's never been a V mintmark on any US coin. The only US coin from that time period with a V on it was the famous Liberty Head nickel, and the "V" of course represented the denomination (5) in Roman numerals.