Category Types
Breadcrumb Menu

Category
Canada - Royal Canadian Mint Bullion
Category Name

Canada - Royal Canadian Mint Bullion

Obscure Finds Coin Collection > Canada > Royal Canadian Mint Bullion.

This section of Obscure Finds Numismatic Collection is made up of coins from the Canada region and specializes in Royal Canadian Mint Bullion coins. If you are looking for coin facts, numismatic data or simple melt value composition of Canada - Royal Canadian Mint Bullion coins, you can find it here at Obscure Finds.

Looking for coin prices and suggested retail values based on a coins grade?
recommends CoinsandCanada.com for the most accurate coin prices and values of coins from Canada.

Canada - Royal Canadian Mint Bullion Coin Types
YEARS Coin Type Name


Canada - Royal Canadian Mint Bullion Coins
1 Example Coins Found...

YEAR IMG COIN NAME COIN GRADE

Other Coin Categories from Canada


Canada - Royal Canadian Mint Bullion Category Description

Royal Canadian Mint Bullion

It all began back in 1908 when the Ottawa Branch of the Royal Mint (as it was known at the time) struck its very first coin—a gold sovereign with a "C" for Canada. In-house gold refining started shortly thereafter and in March 1912, the Department of Finance ordered the Mint to strike 8,000 five-dollar gold coins and 8,000 ten-dollar gold coins. This was a momentous occasion, as these were the first "truly" Canadian gold coins, bearing the word "Canada" with a typically Canadian image—in this case the country's coat of arms.

In 1979, the Royal Canadian Mint began the production of gold bullion, with $50-denomination Gold Maple Leaf one-ounce coins. They were 99.9% pure, guaranteed by the Government of Canada for weight and purity, and before long, they became among the world's most popular pure gold coins.

Today, the Mint operates one of the world's most technically advanced refineries of gold and silver, and markets a family of bullion coins, wafers and bars for investors.

Here are a few more important recent dates and events:

1982: The Royal Canadian Mint introduces the world's first 99.99% pure gold bullion coin
1988: The Royal Canadian Mint introduces the 99.99% pure Silver Maple Leaf (SML) and 99.95% pure Platinum Maple Leaf bullion for sale to investors and collectors
2005: The Palladium Maple Leaf one-troy ounce bullion coin (99.95% pure) is introduced, with a face value of $50 and produced in limited quantities
2007: The Royal Canadian Mint creates a 99.999% pure gold bullion coin, and remains the only mint in the world to issue coins at such a high standard

2007: "The Million Dollar Coin": the Royal Canadian Mint unveils our largest gold bullion coin: the 100-kilogram, .99999 pure Gold Maple Leaf bullion coin, bearing a $1 million face value—only five of these record-setting gold bullion coins were produced

REF