I was going to say casting marks myself. If you look at the T the line goes under the right arm of the T so could very much be a damaged planchet if it does turn out to be real. If real makes for a cool error that I have yet to see on a Buffalo.....
Looks like planchet flaws to me. If it were PMD, I'd expect to see corresponding damage to the E and T in LIBERTY, and I don't. Those letters appear to be hovering above the grooves, indicating to me that they were struck over them.
Also, the Indian's chin doesn't appear to be nicked from that groove there. It just runs up to his chin and stops, like it went under the portrait.
Which would be the case with a pre-strike planchet flaw, which I believe it to be. It may have been a pretty big lamination on the planchet.
No way this is PMD, I say.
On second look, wondering about the suggestions of casting: I wouldn't have thought that, but then again LIBERTY does look pretty soft, and I wonder about that "acne" on the Indian's cheek, near his nose.
I still suspect a laminated or otherwise compromised planchet, but don't know for sure.
I remain pretty firm in my conviction that it is not PMD, though.
An idle theory....the coin appears to be oxidized from being in the ground for a long time. Perhaps it was encased in mud that dried and encased the coin, with the encasement eventually cracking in places. Chemicals in the soil/water/whatever penetrated the cracks and attacked the surface of the coin under the cracks.
I have seen other coins with selective corrosion that would fit this theory. Cannot prove it, of course.
TD
Numismatist. 50 year member ANA. Winner of four ANA Heath Literary Awards; three Wayte and Olga Raymond Literary Awards; Numismatist of the Year Award 2009, and Lifetime Achievement Award 2020. Winner numerous NLG Literary Awards.
Based on what I see in the one photo/scan, which is a bit dark, I'd say it's PMD, and not a lamination or other type of planchet defect.
Hard to know for sure without someone examining it in-hand.
Retired Collector & Dealer in Major Mint Error Coins & Currency since the 1960's.Co-Author of Whitman's "100 Greatest U.S. Mint Error Coins", and the Error Coin Encyclopedia, Vols., III & IV. Retired Authenticator for Major Mint Errors for PCGS. A 50+ Year PNG Member.A full-time numismatist since 1972, retired in 2022.
Comments
Eric
bob
In fact, it could have been me back in '63
It's PMD, so it doesn't much matter how it got there.
http://www.shieldnickels.net
<< <i>I've never seen a Buffalo nickel with such marks. It must be post mint damage. >>
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
it is possible to get clear large images of a couple of the areas?
the edges are quite beveled and smooth, at least from the images.
the bottom most one appears to go on and off bisecting the coin which makes me think planchet defect.
since the coin looks like high au or probably unc, it should be pretty easy to diagnose.
.
<< <i>Although at first glance I thought PMD, a closer examination has me leaning toward planchet damage... interesting marks... Cheers, RickO >>
I'm with Ricko on this one.
Hoard the keys.
"Keep your malarkey filter in good operating order" -Walter Breen
Also, the Indian's chin doesn't appear to be nicked from that groove there. It just runs up to his chin and stops, like it went under the portrait.
Which would be the case with a pre-strike planchet flaw, which I believe it to be. It may have been a pretty big lamination on the planchet.
No way this is PMD, I say.
On second look, wondering about the suggestions of casting: I wouldn't have thought that, but then again LIBERTY does look pretty soft, and I wonder about that "acne" on the Indian's cheek, near his nose.
I still suspect a laminated or otherwise compromised planchet, but don't know for sure.
I remain pretty firm in my conviction that it is not PMD, though.
I have seen other coins with selective corrosion that would fit this theory. Cannot prove it, of course.
TD
photo/scan, which is a bit dark,
I'd say it's PMD, and not a lamination
or other type of planchet defect.
Hard to know for sure without
someone examining it in-hand.