toning or rusting?
I got this quarter back in change the other day, and I'm wondering if you guys think its color is from toning, rusting, or just plain dirt. I apologize if this is a stupid question, but I'm still new at this, and I respect your opinions! Thanks! 

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Comments
Looks like you got yourself a toned quarter - been in circulation so it's nothing to write home about - but still cool
Any ideas on what may have caused it? Does it look natural to you?
I spent that quarter after finding it at a beach with my metal detector!
Most of the nickel based coins I find on a beach look this color. I was putting them in a tumbler with small rocks and amonia and salt to clean them before spending, but now I just spend them because I know they must make people wonder.
Welcome to the boards, and again...Gottcha!
John
myurl
<< <i>Just for the record, toning is rust. >>
baloney. "rust" implies corrosion. such a simpleton view of toning looks foolish.
however, the quarter depicted by sarafaye looks like it is indeed corroded.
K S
When copper nickel coins corrode they can take on this brown color, and they can also turn black. If you see a black nickel or copper-nickel Indian or Flying Eagle cent, you are looking at a corroded coin. It’s just as bad as green is for a copper piece, and the value of the coin is considerably reduced.
In the case of silver coins, the sulfur causes a coating to form on the surface of the metal - but far from being destructive, this coating is actually protective. If it develops quickly and tends to be unsightly, we call it tarnish; if it happens more slowly and attractively, we call it toning. This is a completely natural process that occurs as atoms at the coin's surface interact with their environment, forming new compounds. The resulting veil refracts light according to its variable thickness, producing one or more colors within the visible light spectrum. Unlike most metals, which lose metal when it rusts, silver is not eaten away - that is to say, corroded - by this limited chemical reaction. When the metal rusts, it spalls and loses metal; when silver tones or tarnishes, there is no loss of metal.
Morgan Dollar Aficionado & Vammer
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it is in reference to a specific chemical reaction caused by oxidation and this would not normally
occur with a silver coin. But still the term rust can be applied to deeply tarnished silver since the
process is within the defining characteristics of the term. But yes, chemically speaking it is not
real rust.