Friday, March 5, 2010

" It's official: An asteroid wiped out the dinosaurs"

Mars Asteroid! An asteroid named 2007 WD5 is to have a 1-in-75 chance of hitting Mars, the fourth planet from the sun in our solar system, on January 30, 2008.

If the asteroid with a length of an Olympic-size swimming pool (about 160 feet across) does hit the red planet, the impact of 2007 WD5, which travels at a speed of 28,000 mph, with Mars, will blast a crater half-a-mile wide, said Steve Chesley, a member of NASA's Near Earth Object office at JPL in Pasadena.
Its a must read about Numis network!
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'' Seriously No guts,No glory"
Have you ever found a coin that “couldn’t be?” A coin with a date that doesn’t appear in any catalog? A coin that you are positive is a rare pattern that will make you a millionaire?
"2009 Ultra High Relief $20 Gold"
An unscientific poll of my mail suggests that you aren’t the only one. Counterfeiters and jokesters produce them for varied reasons, but the fact remains, the catalogs are almost always correct and wishing your Coins to be rare is an exercise in futility. Hopefully you haven’t gone as far overboard as some collectors who have spent hundreds or even thousands of dollars in a vain effort to prove that they have a genuine rarity.
"financial freedom"

Here’s a sample: “I have a 1903-dated Lincoln cent. Is this a pattern?”

Sight unseen, I have to say, “You undoubtedly have an altered or counterfeit coin. There were no patterns for the Lincoln cent at that time.”
“I’m enclosing photos of my 1890 Barber quarter. I can’t find it in any catalog. Can you help?
"Earn Money"
Your 1890-dated Barber half dollar undoubtedly is an altered coin, so it would have no value other than bullion. There is no possible way that a die could—or would—have been altered at the Mint to produce just one Coins.
"Create Wealth"

My guess would be that it probably was a 1900 date originally. It may even be a counterfeit, but either way it is technically illegal to own, trade, sell or even give away, so it should be turned in to the Secret Service. You can do this by turning the Coins in at a local bank that is a member of the Federal Reserve System.
"Ground Floor Opportunity"

How about the future? “I have a coin that has a date one or more years from now (or several years before or after a series began or ended). How valuable is this?”
Very likely it has no value. There is no way a Coinscould be struck, even accidentally, with a 1998 date in 1994, so it is undoubtedly an alteration or a fake. To produce a Coins with such a date at the Mint it would be necessary to make a hub with the date, make a die and then strike the Coins, actions involving several dozen people.
"Create Wealth"
Obviously a profitless conspiracy of that magnitude just to produce a single coin that you found in circulation is completely unbelievable. Thus, your Coinsis worthless, and technically illegal to own since the date has been altered.
"Ground Floor Opportunity"
“I have a 1967-D cent. Where can I sell it, and what is it worth?
"Compensation Plan"
If your 1967 cent has a D mintmark, it would have to be an altered Coins. The U.S. Mint stopped using mintmarks on all coins with the 1965 issue and they were not resumed until the 1968 coin production. Since all dies are manufactured at Philadelphia, the punch would not have been available to the Denver Mint and certainly none of the engravers at Philadelphia would have risked their job making a clandestine die. It’s simply not possible that such a coin was struck.

“Wasn’t there a flurry of altered Buffalo nickels back in 1980 that had a mintmark embossed on them?

A quantity of Buffalo nickels, most dated between 1913 and 1926 were altered in this fashion. Once the fakes were publicized, the source dried up, but not before at least one 1909-S V.D.B. cent was similarly faked. Some of the Coins may have gone into collections, so the coin edge should always be closely checked for signs of tampering.
Reeding on a modern cent never happened. Hence the following question:
“What’s the story on the reeded 1937 U.S. cents and nickels?”
This used to be a frequent question. Three hundred sets of the Coins were reeded, possibly by a Mint employee. The reeding was done after the coins were struck and probably outside the Mint. The work was not authorized by the Mint, and constitutes an alteration of the coins. They were altered after being struck, using at least three different knurling tools.
"SPECIAL DEALS"
The statement stands—there are no genuine Mint product modern reeded cents or nickels—of any date. Here again the problem is that a large conspiracy would be necessary to produce two reeded collars and match them with existing dies.
"Real Value"
Sect. 331, Title 18, U.S. Code, prohibits “fraudulent alteration and mutilation of a coin.” One such fraud is involved in changing the diameter of a coin to that of a larger or smaller denomination, so that it could be used in a vending machine, telephone, etc. This includes grinding cents to dime size. So, too, a false date fits this part of the code

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