The new 2008 design (by Matthew Dent for which he received £35,000) has proved very popular. The 20p coins which have this design and NO date on the obverse (queen's head side) are worth between £60 - £80 each. Just 100,000 were struck. Those that ARE dated are worth 20p and ONLY 20p.
i HAVE A 1700 COIN WITH A SHIP ON BACK
It depends on which coin and what year. Post new question please.
It May Be Because of Lag try Logging Out and Back in. Hope I Helped
it is usually a picture of what the state is like or what they are known for
Those were picture-tube TVs. The picture tube was almost as long as the TV screen was wide.
Coins have always had some form of picture or design on them. Dating back to Roman times and earlier, the purpose was to show who was in charge by having the Emperors head on the coin. These days, it possibly serves the same purpose, but also assists with visual identification of the value of the coin and which country it belongs to.
Type in "1871 Liberty Seated dollar coins" in your search box an click images. This will show you the coins.
You earn a few coins when you play the paddock care game and the muck out game. And when you groom your horse. The best way to get the money is under the tab with a picture of coins and an up arrow. You can choose from the different tasks to earn money. Once you've chosen a task you press start and after the set amount of time you go back to that tab and press "Ready" to collect your coins. You also earn coins when you win a competition.
Please check your coin again. It's either not 1965, not JFK, or not a dollar. Most likely it's a HALF dollar, because JFK's picture has only appeared on that denomination since 1964 (turn it over and check the back!) Also, there were no $1 coins struck from 1936 to 1970 inclusive, and the coins struck from 1971 to 1999 are copper-nickel, not silver, while those made since 2000 are brass.
No one, the Icelandic coins all have a picture of fish on the front and the coat-of-arms on the back. Three of the four paper bills do however have pictures of persons. (See www.sedlabanki.is)
No. If you own the coin, it is your loss if it is destroyed. The idea that it is illegal to deface coins goes back (at least) to the Roman Empire. Money belonged to the Emporer and the people were only allowed to use it. It also had his picture on it and damaging his image would indicate your disrespect for his authority. There is, however, a temporary regulation from the US Treasury forbiding the export or melting of cents and nickels for their metal value because the current market price slightly exceeds the monetary value of these coins.
You have to go back everyday and on day one 25 coins, day two 50 coins, day three 75 coins, day four 100, day five goes back down to 25 coins.