gold is worth more than silver, so the more gold the more its worth.
No silver or gold 1 dollar coins were struck in 1933
U.S. coins were copper, silver and gold in the 1800's.
No, for silver coins as the value of silver changes the value of the coin changes. The same is true for gold coins.
Copper, Nickel, Silver and Gold
Some silver coins do tone to a gold color. This is a chemical reaction to the environment the coin has been exposed to.
Not a meaningful question. Gold coins were made from gold and copper without any silver in them. Silver coins were made from silver and copper without any gold.
An ounce. It should say it on the peso.
You get 1 gold by collecting 100 silver coins, and you get 1 silver coin by getting 100 bronze coins.
It depends on what coins/banknotes you are talking about and what year they were minted. Some of the older Yen coins are gold or silver and would be worth their gold/silver content along with any collectible value.
Alot of coins from many countries are as you are describing, if the metals are actually gold and silver that narrows it down, Mexico has made some really nice dual-metal coins with precious metals. But must gold ans silver coins I have seen are bronze and aluminum.
Some coins cost more because they are rarer, or made of gold or silver, not because of where they are from.
Roman coins came in gold, silver and copper. In the earlier days there were also coins in bronze and brass.
Gold and silver coins
coins such as gold and silver
gold alloys which appear white silver
Coins are typically made of a combination of metals, such as copper, nickel, zinc, and sometimes other materials like silver or gold, depending on the denomination and country of origin. Some older coins also contain precious metals like platinum or palladium.
Athens had coins made of bronze, silver and gold.