1972-d MS64 Lincoln in change today. How?

Got a change about an hour ago at the Subway, and when giving it my usual 30+ year numis-glance® I noticed one of the blast red zinc cents had a particularly thick rim. I was then stunned to find that what I thought was a zinc cent was in fact a deep-dish struck and completely mark-free 1972-D. Seriously, the thing looks like a medal, it is so mark-free and strong. I checked up and down, inside and out for any sign of doubling, but nothing (except the tiniest little *umph* under the top part of the "2" under 10x).
Question is: What is the most likely reason for this 32-year-old gem to turn up in a change drawer at a Subway? Was it from an original roll? From a mint set? Part of a collection? Lost under a floorboard and returned to circulation just this morning?
Question is: What is the most likely reason for this 32-year-old gem to turn up in a change drawer at a Subway? Was it from an original roll? From a mint set? Part of a collection? Lost under a floorboard and returned to circulation just this morning?
We are like children who look at print and see a serpent in the last letter but one, and a sword in the last.
--Severian the Lame
--Severian the Lame
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The other posibility is what I did about three years ago. I went through about 25 rolls of cents--cherry picked the rolls and dumped the rejects in a coinstar machine. I probably could have sold them, but too much hastle. Maybe someone else did the same.
President, Racine Numismatic Society 2013-2014; Variety Resource Dimes; See 6/8/12 CDN for my article on Winged Liberty Dimes; Ebay
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<< <i>a kid had borrowed dads collection for beer money >>
What sorta kid are we talking about here?
Cents and nickels are more likely to be from rolls. There were lots of rolls being saved and they are
still being pulled out and checked for varieties and gems. It's typical to return lesser coins to circu-
lation. Generally this is the sort of coin that collectors are searching for though so it defies explanation
that a roll coin like this would be returned to circulation. For this reason the chances of it being a mint
set coin are increased a little. Many mint sets are destroyed haphazardly since they are so inexpensive.
It's highly improbable that it was a coin that just sat in a piigy bank for many years. Certainly there are
many cents which sit out of circulation but the odds of catching it while it's still unc and that the coin
is a near gem make it most unlikely to have come to you this way. Only a very few of the coins made
for circulation of this date were well struck and mark free.
This coin is actually one of the toughest of the Lincolns in a nice choice gem with a decent strike. The
pops are relatively high but finding true gems is tougher than the pops would indicate.