They have no gold in them, they're made of brass and are worth just 1 dollar. Spend them.
The current "golden" dollars aren't real gold at all. They're just gold-colored, and are made of manganese brass. After all, that much gold would be worth several hundred dollars, so even the government wouldn't be foolish enough to circulate coins worth 600 or 700 times what you pay for them at a bank!
5.4 million dollars
150.000$
Roughly 75% of the gold quote.
They have no gold in them, they're made of brass and are worth just 1 dollar. Spend them.
It's gold-plated, not solid gold, as US quarters have never been made of gold. It might sell for a couple dollars.
The modern "Golden Dollars" only look gold. So the answer is none.
that depends on the size of the stones and gold (if that is what they are made of) up to millions of dollars.!!!
The average price for a troy ounce of gold in 2001 was $271.04
The current "golden" dollars aren't real gold at all. They're just gold-colored, and are made of manganese brass. After all, that much gold would be worth several hundred dollars, so even the government wouldn't be foolish enough to circulate coins worth 600 or 700 times what you pay for them at a bank!
300 pounds of gold
like 15 dollars
The gold dollar coin was minted from 1849 to 1889. None were made in 1932.
about 1.0000 dollars
About 10 dollars.
If you mean one of the current Presidential Dollars or the Sacagawea Dollar, none - they're made of brass, not gold. If you mean a real gold dollar from the 1850s, .04837 troy ounce.