Great Britain 1971 10 pence
This specimen was lot 34185 in Heritage sale 3082 (New York, January 2020), where it sold for $180. The catalog description[1] noted, "Great Britain: Elizabeth II Mint Error - Wrong Planchet 10 New Pence 1971 MS63 PCGS. Struck on a 7.82 g copper nickel planchet." This ten new pence, or 1/10 of a pound, was introduced in 1968 as part of the decimal reform. It was struck to the same module as the superseded florin, which had the same value. It was struck in this style until 1982, when the word "new" was dropped from the reverse. The module was reduced to 6.50 g in 1990. Some dates, such as 1972 and 1978, were struck only for collector sets.
Recorded mintage: 63,205,000 plus 350,000 proofs.
Specification: 11.31 g, copper-nickel, 28.5 mm diameter.
Catalog reference: KM 912.
- Michael, Thomas, and Tracy L. Schmidt, Standard Catalog of World Coins, 1901-2000, 47th ed., Iola, WI: Krause Publications, 2019.
- Lobel, Richard, Mark Davidson, Allan Hailstone and Eleni Calligas, Coincraft's Standard Catalogue of English and UK Coins, 1066 to Date, London: Coincraft, 1995.
- Skingley, Philip, ed., Standard Catalogue of British Coins: Coins of England & the United Kingdom, 46th edition, London: Spink & Son, 2011.
- [1]Bierrenbach, Cristiano, Warren Tucker and Sam Spiegel, Heritage World and Ancient Coins Online Auction 3082, featuring the Caranett Collection, Dallas, TX: Heritage Auction Galleries, 2019.
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