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Replies: 16 / Views: 3,518 |
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Valued Member
United States
337 Posts |
I've been trying to find a site that list all coins contains silver from us to foreign coins but haven't had much luck. Anyone know a site that list all coins? Any help would be appreciated.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
807 Posts |
What you ask for is impossible. Before 1940, most countries in the world made silver coins for circulation. As you go back further, the number of coin-issuing entities increases, until before 1500 you are faced with a veritable sea of individual issuers. And there is no way of knowing for certain which issuers produced what sorts of coins, not to speak of which of those types has members surviving to the present day. Then, beginning about 1980, you have the big boom in "non-circulating legal tender" coins in name only, issued in the names of all manner of states, from the USA down to tiny nonentities such as the Keeling & Cocos Islands. Sorting out which of these issues are actually authorized by law, & which are fantasies or spurious issues, is its own challenge. So, I presume there is something you want to do. Why not explain what it is? If you have particular coins you want to look up, a copy of the Standard Catalog of World Coins (found in many libraries), or the NGC World Coin Values website, may suit your needs. If you are looking to create some kind of checklist, I suggest you choose narrower parameters than "all coins with silver in them, ever"!
Edited by publius 07/25/2013 5:58 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United Kingdom
2868 Posts |
Silver wash on later roman follis - Debased drachm's from the post Shahi dynasties even late period Ottoman empire "silvers" etc... are all questionable as to when silver coins become billon become just copper. If it's modern stuff you just look it up in Krause or the like.
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Pillar of the Community
Japan
666 Posts |
take catalog of world coins most silver is listed there
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1200 Posts |
I've never seen any such thing as an "all the silver coins in the world" website either, but one of the most extensive inventories (of current and recent silver) you'll find in the major online vendors is APMEX. If you're a daring type, there's always ebay, too...
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Valued Member
 United States
337 Posts |
Thanks so far for the input. I guess maybe I should elaborated a little more but I was about to leave the house and wanted to put the question up before I left. To put some parameters on my question is I'm looking to invest in, particularly silver, coins for investment/novelty. I have started stopping by coin/pawn shops and looking to see what they have and really don't have a clue what coins contain silver besides late 1800 to I think 1977 US coins. I'm probably going to stick to those coins, but say a Canadian quarter or something along those lines is at a good price, I know to buy it. I was just wondering if there was a "cheat sheet" for coins containing silver in the past say 150 years. I'll do a little research and maybe I'll just create my own.
Edited by Avshater22 07/26/2013 12:01 am
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1454 Posts |
As Publius already stated, the Standard Catalog of World Coins is the guide for you. Just choose the era you're after and have fun.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
807 Posts |
OK, here are a few of the things you're going to see most often. US dimes, quarters, half dollars, & dollars dated up to 1964 are 90% silver (except some early dates you're not likely to see ; similarly there are Half Dimes & two different kinds of silver 3-cent pieces, not to be confused with 3-cent nickels...). US half dollars dated 1965 to 1969 are 40% silver. Panamanian coins are identical to US, as are Cuban in general. Canadian five-cents (small, not nickel-sized), ten-cents, twenty-five-cents, fifty-cents, & dollars dated up to 1921 are sterling silver (92.5%). After that, until 1967, they are 80%. 1967 can be either 80% or 50%, & there's no easy way to tell them apart ; 1968 are either 50% silver or pure nickel, which is magnetic. After that the circulation coins are not silver. If you see Newfoundland coins, they are pretty much all sterling in the 5-10-25-50 denominations. Great Britain coins of three pence (small, not the nickel-sized yellow ones), six pence, one shilling, two shillings (floring), two and a half shillings (half crown) & five shillings (crown) dated up to 1921 are sterling ; after that, up to 1945, they are 50% silver. There are other silver denominations, but you're not likely to see them. The same goes for New Zealand & most of the other countries on the pound system, except for the New Zealand crown of 1949 (50%), & the Bermuda crowns of 1959 (sterling) & 1964 (50%). Irish shillings, florins, & half-crowns are 75% silver up to 1943, & the very thick 10-shilling piece of 1966 is 83.3%. Australian coins of the denominations mentioned are sterling up to 1945, then 50% until decimalization. The one-year round 50-cent piece of 1966 is 80% silver. South Africa is 80% silver up until 1950, 50% thereafter until some time after the abandonment of the pound in favour of the rand. Mexico is all over the map, with peso coins of as little as 10% silver in late dates, & some recent new-peso coins in bimetallic, with a brass ring & a silver center. Japanese 100-yen pieces are 64% silver from 1957 to 1966. Larger Dutch coins (1/2, 1, 2 1/2 gulden) are 94.5% silver from 1840 to 1917, 72% thereafter until 1967. The smaller pieces (5, 10, 25 cents) are mostly 64% silver until 1945. I can't emphasize enough that there are lots more out there.
Edited by publius 07/26/2013 02:02 am
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Moderator
 Australia
16805 Posts |
I cannot speak for its comprehensiveness, but CurrencyDebasement has made a pretty good try at putting together lists of most commonly encountered circulating silver coinages by country, for at least the period 1900-present, with the actual silver weights, finenesses and a dollar-value calculator.
Don't say "infinitely" when you mean "very"; otherwise, you'll have no word left when you want to talk about something really infinite. - C. S. Lewis
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Valued Member
 United States
337 Posts |
Wow publius that's pretty much exactly what I wanted to know. Thanks for taking the time to write that all out. It should definitely help me out when browsing coins around town.
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Valued Member
United States
239 Posts |
Publius that was a great response!
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Valued Member
United States
293 Posts |
What you are simply going to need to do is make you a spreadsheet with tabs by country. Of course the tricky part is some nations watered down the silver in more than one phase. Canada went from sterling (92.5%) to 90% in 1920 then to 50% in 1967 and then fiat in 1968. Great Britain went from sterling (92.5%)to 50% in 1920 and then fiat in 1946.
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Pillar of the Community
United Kingdom
2868 Posts |
Quote: the very thick 10-shilling piece of 1966 is 83.3% This coin was really a commemorative piece and didn't circulate. I guess the OP needs to make the call if it includes NCLT or not - or any of the other quasi legitimate rounds.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
807 Posts |
Quote: This coin was really a commemorative piece and didn't circulate. They certainly show up in circulated condition pretty often.
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
3692 Posts |
@atchisonbj: Canada never had .900 fine silver coins, only .800 silver fine.
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Pillar of the Community
United Kingdom
2868 Posts |
That would be leprechauns and their dremil buffering tools.
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Replies: 16 / Views: 3,518 |