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OurDinosaurs of Canada set is your gateway to a Late Cretaceous Canada, home to prehistoric wonders of all shapes and sizes! Tucked inside an exhibit-ready pop-up folder, these special-themed coins feature three different dinosaurs that were discovered in Canada—the proof is in their names!
- Rhodium-Plated Pure Silver Coin - The Royal Canadian Mint
Royalty among horned dinosaurs: Uncover the story of a...
- Discovering Dinosaurs: Mercury's Horned Face - The Royal Canadian Mint
Designed by Canadian paleoartist Julius Csotonyi, the coin’s...
- Rhodium-Plated Pure Silver Coin - The Royal Canadian Mint
Royalty among horned dinosaurs: Uncover the story of a unique Canadian find. In 2005, a prehistoric snout encased in calcareous concretion was spotted in a cliff overlooking Alberta’s Oldman River.
Designed by Canadian paleoartist Julius Csotonyi, the coin’s reverse features the fossilized skull of Mercuriceratops gemini, a recently discovered horned dinosaur species. Beneath the black rhodium plating, the engraved texture represents the rock formation in Alberta’s Dinosaur Provincial Park where a key fossil fragment was found.
Canadian, silver collector coins featuring dinosaurs, fossils, and prehistoric creatures who once walked the Canadian territories and the World over. Ferocious tyrannosaurus, albertosaurus, and many more.
Unveiled in 2015, Regaliceratops peterhewsi makes its coin debut on this 2024 collectible, where the 69-million-year-old skull shines against the black rhodium-plated “limestone” background. Presenting “Royal Horned Face,” another Canadian dinosaur discovery.
Detailed information about the coin 25 Cents, Elizabeth II (Pachyrhinosaurus lakustai), Canada, with pictures and collection and swap management: mintage, descriptions, metal, weight, size, value and other numismatic data.
Our Dinosaurs of Canada set is your gateway to a Late Cretaceous Canada, home to prehistoric wonders of all shapes and sizes! Tucked inside an exhibit-ready pop-up folder, these special-themed coins feature three different dinosaurs that were discovered in Canada—the proof is in their names!