I've noticed that many circulated cents from the late '60s and much of the '70s have a beautiful "green" tint to them. Was the alloy different for these years? The green pennies seem to end in the late '70s and I don't see green '82 pennies. Am I the only one who noticed this? These cents are very attractive.
"Green" '70s pennies
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It could be verdigri... Also maybe there was to much copper and not enough zinc in the mix for the planchets... Most of the ones I have seen from this time frame have been the verdigri!!!Jim
(A.K.A. Elmer Fudd)Be verwy verwy quiet... I'm hunting coins!!! Good Hunting!!!
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Natural patina of copper is green, like the statue of liberty or a copper building or roof and maybe the reason most cents aren't as green is from the constant handling and skin oil and being bronze. Makes sense that some cents are greenies
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Here is one i saved:Comment
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Another thought.
The older cents were circulated more frequently, less time in jars and more time in use.
Those old cents were wearing down so the toning was always wearing off and getting refreshed, those are often lighter toning. An extreme would be a worn flat old wheat cent.
The more modern cents hardly ever have significant wear, the wear barely gets through the toning.Comment
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