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1939 P Lincoln Wheat Cent - Reverse

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Pillar of the Community
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 Posted 12/31/2016  3:36 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Mark1959 to your friends list
Can you post a pic of the obverse too? It might yield a clue.
But I see what looks like the oak leaves from an Indian Head cent so maybe an Indian was glued to the wheat and the wheat got damaged when somebody decided to split them - just a guess.
Edited by Mark1959
12/31/2016 3:42 pm
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United States
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 Posted 12/31/2016  3:42 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SF11Dude to your friends list
Sure thing...coming right up.

1939-P-Lincoln-Wheat-Cent---Reverse
Pillar of the Community
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 Posted 12/31/2016  3:45 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Mark1959 to your friends list
Yep - looks like the obverse shows signs of the reverse damage too.
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 Posted 12/31/2016  3:52 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SF11Dude to your friends list
Yep, the front has some damage but what is odd is the way the lamination has come off on the back but not on the front.

The front has gouges but is not "flaking" off in layers/sections like the back (to me); I am basing this on looking at the reverse left wheat stalk, notice the circular chunk at the base?

So does impact/gouge to the front cause the coin to come apart in layers and chunks?
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 Posted 12/31/2016  3:55 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SF11Dude to your friends list
Mark 1959, can you point out the IHC oak leaves please? I cannot see them.

I see varying shapes and layers but can't quite pick them out.

Amazing you can see them in this photo.
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 Posted 12/31/2016  4:05 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Mark1959 to your friends list

Quote:
So does impact/gouge to the front cause the coin to come apart in layers and chunks?


No but a screw driver and hammer does!

I'm still leaning to damage as opposed to a lamination problem but somebody else may reply with another idea.
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 Posted 12/31/2016  4:09 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Mark1959 to your friends list

Quote:
can you point out the IHC oak leaves please


The area you pointed out at the base of the left wheat stalk - I thought it looked like part of the oak leaf wreath on the reverse of an Indian - maybe not.
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 Posted 12/31/2016  4:18 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SF11Dude to your friends list
Yep, the oak leaf seems to line up on the stalk, I am so not sure about this either.

Additionally, the lamination is based on these two snippets; note the lamination of the "ONE" actually appears to overlay the "E" in "CENT" and is coming off in a chuck and has stratification layers showing on the right.

The Oak Leaf chunk seems to be separating from the planchet or is a very thin slice from an IHC or some other leaf stuck to the wheat leaf below it (see stalk end).

1939-P-Lincoln-Wheat-Cent---Reverse

1939-P-Lincoln-Wheat-Cent---Reverse
Pillar of the Community
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 Posted 12/31/2016  4:29 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Mark1959 to your friends list
This might be a combination of damage and lamination making it hard to figure out which is which.
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 Posted 12/31/2016  4:32 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SF11Dude to your friends list
Agreed, it is some freaky lab experiment of some kind.
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 Posted 12/31/2016  4:52 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Halo1st to your friends list
See a damaged coin, with lamination / delamination abound. The lamination issues are very interesting, but the damage is equally distracting. Thanks, Doug.
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 Posted 12/31/2016  4:57 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Coinfrog to your friends list
Must agree.
Rest in Peace
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 Posted 12/31/2016  4:58 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add moxking to your friends list
with those thoughts. If the damage could be determined first it would help figure out what wasn't damage, if anything.

It really is a nasty looking mess.
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 Posted 12/31/2016  6:30 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Dustin6 to your friends list
its just damage
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 Posted 12/31/2016  7:28 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add 11997755 to your friends list
Looks like a lamination that has been beat up on.
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