Difference between revisions of "Mexico 2004 100 pesos KM-692"
m (Text replacement - "* [[Mexico 2004 100 pesos KM-744" to "* 2004 100 pesos, Nuevo Leon * [[Mexico 2004 100 pesos KM-744") |
(added links) |
||
| Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
''[[Bibliography|Sources:]]'' | ''[[Bibliography|Sources:]]'' | ||
| − | * | + | * Amaya Guerra, Carlos Abel, ''Epitome Ilustrado de la Moneda Mexican Moderna, 1905 a 2015,'' Monterrey, Mexico, 2015. |
| + | * Bailey, Don and Lois, ''Whitman Encyclopedia of [[Mexico|Mexican]] Money, Volume 1, An Illustrated History of Mexican Coins and Currency,'' Atlanta: Whitman Publishing, 2014. | ||
| + | * Michael, Thomas, and Tracy L. Schmidt, ''Standard Catalog of World Coins, 2001-Date, 13th ed.,'' Iola, WI: Krause Publications, 2018. | ||
* <sup>[1]</sup>Tucker, Warren, Scott Cordry and John Kraljevich, ''Heritage Sale 3010: World Coins,'' Dallas, TX: Heritage Auction Galleries, 2010. | * <sup>[1]</sup>Tucker, Warren, Scott Cordry and John Kraljevich, ''Heritage Sale 3010: World Coins,'' Dallas, TX: Heritage Auction Galleries, 2010. | ||
| Line 20: | Line 22: | ||
* [[Mexico 2003 100 pesos KM-698|2003 100 pesos, Veracruz]] | * [[Mexico 2003 100 pesos KM-698|2003 100 pesos, Veracruz]] | ||
* [[Mexico 2003 100 pesos KM-688|2003 100 pesos, Zacatecas]] | * [[Mexico 2003 100 pesos KM-688|2003 100 pesos, Zacatecas]] | ||
| + | * [[Mexico 2004 1 peso|2004 peso]] | ||
| + | * [[Mexico 2004 2 pesos|2004 2 pesos]] | ||
| + | * [[Mexico 2004 10 pesos KM-796|2004 silver 10 pesos Michoacán]] | ||
* [[Mexico 2004 100 pesos KM-693|2004 100 pesos, Tabasco]] | * [[Mexico 2004 100 pesos KM-693|2004 100 pesos, Tabasco]] | ||
* [[Mexico 2004 100 pesos KM-694|2004 100 pesos, Sonora]] | * [[Mexico 2004 100 pesos KM-694|2004 100 pesos, Sonora]] | ||
| Line 28: | Line 33: | ||
* [[Mexico 2004 100 pesos KM-738|2004 100 pesos, Puebla]] | * [[Mexico 2004 100 pesos KM-738|2004 100 pesos, Puebla]] | ||
* [[Mexico 2004 100 pesos KM-740|2004 100 pesos, Oaxaca]] | * [[Mexico 2004 100 pesos KM-740|2004 100 pesos, Oaxaca]] | ||
| − | |||
* [[Mexico 2004 100 pesos KM-742|2004 100 pesos, Nuevo Leon]] | * [[Mexico 2004 100 pesos KM-742|2004 100 pesos, Nuevo Leon]] | ||
* [[Mexico 2004 100 pesos KM-744|2004 100 pesos, Nayarit]] | * [[Mexico 2004 100 pesos KM-744|2004 100 pesos, Nayarit]] | ||
| Line 35: | Line 39: | ||
* [[Mexico 2004 100 pesos KM-750|2004 100 pesos, Jalisco]] | * [[Mexico 2004 100 pesos KM-750|2004 100 pesos, Jalisco]] | ||
* [[Mexico 2004 100 pesos KM-748|2004 100 pesos, Estado de Mexico]] | * [[Mexico 2004 100 pesos KM-748|2004 100 pesos, Estado de Mexico]] | ||
| + | * [[Mexico 2004 onza|2004 onza]] | ||
| + | * [[Mexico 2004 2 onzas|2004 2 onzas]] | ||
* [[Mexico 2006 100 pesos KM-789|2006 100 pesos Guanajuato]] | * [[Mexico 2006 100 pesos KM-789|2006 100 pesos Guanajuato]] | ||
* [[Mexico 2010 5 pesos KM-920|2010 5 pesos Hidalgo]] | * [[Mexico 2010 5 pesos KM-920|2010 5 pesos Hidalgo]] | ||
Revision as of 14:05, 30 December 2024
This specimen is one of a series issued by the Mexico City mint to honor each of the Mexican states, this one being for Tamaulipas. The program was modeled on the U. S. Mint's state quarter program and was quite popular. The first series, featuring the arms of each state, was issued in reverse alphabetical order, starting with Zacatecas. It was also issued as a bimetallic gold/silver commemorative. The second series, commencing in 2005, featured state animals, monuments, heroes, etc. The circulating coins are the same weight and diameter as the bimetallic fifty pesos of 1993-95 (KM 571). This specimen is a gold and silver bimetallic proof. It was lot 22997 in Heritage sale 3010 (Boston, August 2010), where it sold for $632.50. The catalog description[1] noted, "Estados Unidos Bi-Metallic gold and silver 100 Pesos 2004, Proof. Celebrating the 180th anniversary of federation. Housed in its original case with certificate of authenticity."
Recorded mintage: 249,398 for circulation and 1,000 proofs (shown here).
Specification: circulating coin: 33.825 g, brass outer ring with 0.925 fine silver center, .500 troy oz ASW, 39.9 mm diameter, segmented reeded edge. Proof: 29.169 g, Bi-Metallic, .999 Gold 17.154 g center in .999 Silver 12.015 g ring, 34.5 mm diameter.
Catalog reference: KM 692 (brass/silver), KM 700 (silver/gold).
- Amaya Guerra, Carlos Abel, Epitome Ilustrado de la Moneda Mexican Moderna, 1905 a 2015, Monterrey, Mexico, 2015.
- Bailey, Don and Lois, Whitman Encyclopedia of Mexican Money, Volume 1, An Illustrated History of Mexican Coins and Currency, Atlanta: Whitman Publishing, 2014.
- Michael, Thomas, and Tracy L. Schmidt, Standard Catalog of World Coins, 2001-Date, 13th ed., Iola, WI: Krause Publications, 2018.
- [1]Tucker, Warren, Scott Cordry and John Kraljevich, Heritage Sale 3010: World Coins, Dallas, TX: Heritage Auction Galleries, 2010.
Link to:
- 2003 100 pesos, Yucatan
- 2003 100 pesos, Veracruz
- 2003 100 pesos, Zacatecas
- 2004 peso
- 2004 2 pesos
- 2004 silver 10 pesos Michoacán
- 2004 100 pesos, Tabasco
- 2004 100 pesos, Sonora
- 2004 100 pesos, Sinaloa
- 2004 100 pesos, San Luis Potosí
- 2004 100 pesos, Quintana Roo
- 2004 100 pesos, Queretaro Arteaga
- 2004 100 pesos, Puebla
- 2004 100 pesos, Oaxaca
- 2004 100 pesos, Nuevo Leon
- 2004 100 pesos, Nayarit
- 2004 100 pesos, Morelos
- 2004 100 pesos, Michoacan
- 2004 100 pesos, Jalisco
- 2004 100 pesos, Estado de Mexico
- 2004 onza
- 2004 2 onzas
- 2006 100 pesos Guanajuato
- 2010 5 pesos Hidalgo
- Coins and currency dated 2004
- return to Mexican coinage of the reform, 1994 to date