Golden Penny

I found a gold colored 2000 US penny last night, and I’m kind of curious as to how it got that way. I scratched the surface of the penny and got the zinc center of the penny, no copper at all. Perhaps this got mixed in with a batch of Sackies? Anybody know?

I found a way to make your own “gold pennies”, FWIW.

http://www.loupcity.k12.ne.us/academic/project2.html

Could that be it?

Better Living Through Chemistry. :smiley:

Also, I note that it specifies copper pennies dated 1982 or earlier, so what’s the date on the one you’ve got?

Oh, duh. 2000.

Bring more coffee…

:smiley:

I’ve seen pennies that were metallic green, blue, and red in addition to gold. Someone out there is anodizing pennies for some reason.

Its an old trick done in science classes. Essentially you coat them in zinc, and thenheat the zinc, so that it either tarnishes orbonds with the copper to form rass. I dont recall the specifics. I do recall that when scratched, the sinc (silver) shows through though.

Most likely, if you find a gold-colored cent-nickel-dime-quarter-half these days in the US, it was gold plated by a promotional company that then packages them and sells them to the public for outrageous prices. We get to purchase them in our coin shop years after the fact. There has never been a US coin type made in the last 100 years that I haven’t bought gold-plated.

Directions: take a cent, plate it with gold. Total cost=5 cents. Package in a fancy holder. Cost 10cents. Sell for $9.95.