The Triple Nickels were the 555th Army Airborne division. They were paratroopers.
The Triple Alliance.
With silver at $27.10 per ounce. War nickels are worth about $1.50.
War Nickels contain 35% silver or 0.05626oz of silver.
the central powers were known before the war as the triple alliance and before the war the allies were known as the triple entente
Including the proof 1942P coin (27,600) 869,923,700 War Nickels were struck
No. "V" nickels, also called Liberty Head nickels, consist of 75% copper and 25% nickel.
Yes, all US nickels dated 1934 are Buffalo nickels, but the coins are also called Indian Head nickels. The series ran from 1913-1938
Well those kinds of buffalo nickels are called dateless buffalo nickels. And if you have one of them, they were made in1913 by the U.S. Mint.
Never. They're called nickels for a reason. The only U.S. nickels to contain any silver at all, at 35%, were "war" nickels dated 1942-1945. Nothing before or after was made of silver.
Buffalo nickels were made from 1913 to 1938. Nickels made from 1883 to 1912 are called Liberty nickels, or sometimes V nickels because they had the Roman numeral V (i.e. 5) on the reverse side.
Nickels aren't layered.
They weren't called nickels because that coin didn't exist yet. They were called 5-cent bills or fractional currency. See the Related Link for a picture.
Double bonded hydrocarbons are called alkenes, and triple bonded hydrocarbons are called alkynes.
Five-Cent Indian Head
Please check again and post a new question. Buffalo* nickels were minted from 1913 to 1938. [*] Nickels depicting an Indian head on one side and a buffalo on the other are called Indian head nickels OR buffalo nickels, but not "buffalo head" nickels because they show the entire buffalo, not just its head.
None, because there is no coin called a "buffalo head" nickel, and the only US nickels that ever contained silver were special "war nickels" minted from 1942 to 1945.Buffalo nickels were minted from 1913 to 1938 and are made of the same 75% copper / 25% nickel alloy used for all US nickels except war nickels.
Buffalo nickels were first minted in 1913. There were two varieties that year. So-called Type I nickels show the buffalo standing on a raised or inclined mound, while Type II nickels have the buffalo on the more familiar flat ground.