Roll Mixed Mercury
Roll Mixed Mercury
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![]() UNSEARCHED WHEAT PENNY ROLL WITH INDIAN HEAD CENT END US $8.99
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![]() OVER 40 Liberty Head V Nickels SOME EARLY DATESMIXED DATES c93 US $22.22
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![]() Mixed wheat rolls with Merc Dime one end Barber Dime on other end US $17.75
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![]() 1944 P D S SOLID DATE ROLL 50 MERCURY DIMES $500 FACE VALUE 90 SILVER COINS US $129.76
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![]() UNSEARCHED WHEAT PENNY ROLL WITH AN NDIAN HEAD CENT END LOT 726G US $9.19
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![]() UNSEARCHED WHEAT PENNY ROLL WITH AN INDIAN HEAD CENT SHOWING US $8.99
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![]() WHEAT PENNY ROLL W D S Mint Mercury Dime ends t2 US $16.50
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![]() Unsearched Penny Roll 41 IH Reverse showing on Both ends US $33.57
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![]() OVER 40 Liberty Head V Nickels SOME EARLY DATESMIXED DATES c16 US $17.38
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![]() UNSEARCHED WHEAT PENNY ROLL WITH INDIAN HEAD END LOT 9838 US $8.99
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![]() UNSEARCHED PENNY ROLL RARE WHEAT INDIAN HEAD MERC DIME US $9.99
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![]() UNSEARCHED WHEAT PENNY ROLL WITH AN INDIAN HEAD CENT END LOT KIJ92 US $8.99
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![]() Mixed date roll of Mercury Winged Liberty Head Dimes 50 count SILVER US $115.50
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![]() Mixed date roll of Mercury Winged Liberty Head Dimes 50 count SILVER 1916 US $107.78
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![]() MIX OF 90 SILVER DIMES ROOSEVELT MERCURY BARBER 3 DAY AUCTION NO RESERVE US $124.56
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![]() OVER 40 Liberty Head V Nickels SOME EARLY DATESMIXED DATES c20 US $17.38
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![]() 50 90 SILVER MERCURY DIMES US $120.00
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![]() WHEAT PENNY ROLL W D S Mint Mercury Dime ends t6 US $14.50
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![]() UNSEARCHED WHEAT PENNY ROLL WITH AN INDIAN HEAD CENT END LOT 1 US $8.99
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![]() Mixed wheat rolls with Merc Dime Indian Penny on ends US $14.75
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![]() UNSEARCHED WHEAT PENNY ROLL WITH INDIAN HEAD END LOT TS66 US $8.99
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![]() Unsearched W Penny Roll IH IH REV SHOWING B60 US $5.55
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![]() OVER 40 Liberty Head V Nickels SOME EARLY DATESMIXED DATES c21 US $15.55
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![]() 10 ROLLS OF UNSEARCHED WHEAT PENNIES BONUS LOOK US $70.99
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![]() UNSEARCHED WHEAT PENNY ROLL WITH AN INDIAN HEAD CENT END LOT JC6 US $8.99
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![]() UNSEARCHED WHEAT PENNY ROLL WITH AN NDIAN HEAD CENT END LOT 6784 US $9.00
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![]() Unsearched Wheat Indianhead Roll w VG 1830 Cap Bust d Mercury Dimes L47H US $21.51
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![]() $10 Face Value 1964 earlier 90 Silver Mixed Dimes US $230.50
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![]() Unsearched Wheat Indianhead Roll w VG Civil War Token 1865 Indianhead L48H US $45.87
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![]() Unsearched Penny Roll 42 IH Reverse showing on Both ends US $31.07
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![]() Unsearched Penny Roll 43 1908 OR 1908S IH IH Reverse showing on ends US $34.99
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![]() 12 Liberty Head V Nickels MIXED DATES D02 US $9.95
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![]() Unsearched Penny Roll 44 1907 IH IH Reverse showing on ends US $33.78
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![]() Unsearched Penny Roll 45 IH Reverse showing on Both ends US $34.99
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![]() Unsearched Penny Roll 46 1926D Lincoln Penny IH Reverse showing on ends US $31.07
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![]() Unsearched Wheat Indianhead Roll w 1853 Trime 1910 Barber Dime ends L49H US $11.50
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![]() Unsearched Wheat Indianhead Roll w VG 1857 Flying Eagle 1879 IndianheadL50H US $31.00
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![]() Unsearched Penny Roll 47 1905 IH 1901 IH showing on ends US $33.78
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![]() Unsearched Penny Roll 48 IH Reverse showing on Both ends US $33.55
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![]() Unsearched Penny Roll 49 IH Reverse showing on Both ends US $33.99
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![]() Unsearched Penny Roll 410 1858 LL Flying Eagle IH Reverse showing on ends US $51.00
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![]() $ 5 FACE VALUE NICE ROLL MIXED DATE MERCURY DIMES US $102.50
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![]() Roll of 50 Silver Mercury Dimes $500 Face Value 90 Silver $5 Roll US $123.17
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![]() Wheat Penny Roll UNSEARCHED 1858 Flying Eagle 1866 3 Cent Nickel US $56.55
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![]() Wheat Penny Roll UNSEARCHED 1909 VDB Wheat Cent 1908 Indian Head Cent US $42.14
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![]() Wheat Penny Roll UNSEARCHED 1857 Flying Eagle 1840 Seated Liberty Dime US $52.15
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![]() OVER 40 Liberty Head V NickelsSOME EARLY DATESMIXED DATES c28 US $1.47
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![]() COIN PICKERS SPECIAL $25 LOT OF MIXED COINS 100 YEARS OLD OR OLDER US $25.00
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![]() WHEAT PENNY ROLL W D S Mint Mercury Dime ends t8 US $13.50
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![]() Mixed Roll of Silver Dimes mostly Mercury with a few Roosevelt 50 Coins US $190.00
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![]() WHEAT PENNY ROLL W D S Mint Mercury Dime ends t14 US $2.47
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![]() hurry wont last $4025 fvmixed lot of silver dollars1 2 dollarsquartersdimes US $550.00
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![]() OVER 40 Liberty Head V Nickels SOME EARLY DATESMIXED DATES c30 US $.99
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![]() OVER 40 Liberty Head V Nickels SOME EARLY DATESMIXED DATES c61 US $.99
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![]() OVER 40 Liberty Head V Nickels SOME EARLY DATESMIXED DATES c58 US $.99
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![]() Mercury 50 silver Dimes 1916 1946 US $127.00
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![]() Lot Mixed Coins Silver Proofs High Grade Buffalo Folder More Resale US $21.85
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![]() OLD IH Wht CENTS Mixed Shotgun Roll IH Tails Silver Dime Ends US $6.50
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![]() Unsearched Wheat Indianhead Roll w 1909 s VDB Wheat 1909 Wheat ends L1A US $28.99
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![]() Unsearched Wheat Indianhead Roll w 1857 Flying Eagle 1881 Indianhead L2A US $32.00
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![]() Unsearched Wheat Indianhead Roll w Silver Love Token 1928 Mercury Dime L3A US $22.00
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![]() Unsearched Penny Roll 483 1908 INDIAN HEAD | REV INDIAN HEAD US $12.20
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![]() Unsearched Wheat Indianhead Roll w 1856 Seated Half Dime d Mercury DimeL4A US $16.49
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![]() 50 Mercury Dimes 1942 1943 1944 90 Silver Good Condition 396 Troy Oz US $52.99
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![]() 50pc Mixed Date Roll Silver Mercury Dimes 36oz Silver Per Roll G XF US $125.50
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![]() Unsearched Penny Roll 490 INDIAN HEAD TAILS SHOWING ON BOTH ENDS US $12.75
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![]() Unsearched Penny Roll 484 MERCURY DIME | REV INDIAN HEAD US $10.55
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![]() One Roll of 50 Silver Mercury DImes G to XF US $117.54
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![]() Unsearched Penny Roll 481 BU WHEAT CENT | REV INDIAN HEAD US $10.55
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![]() Wheat Penny Roll UNSEARCHED 1857 Flying Eagle 1909 Indian Head Cent US $31.00
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![]() Wheat Penny Roll UNSEARCHED 1888 Seated Liberty Dime 1867 Three Cent Nickel US $46.00
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![]() Wheat Penny Roll UNSEARCHED 1887 Seated Liberty Dime Silver Trime 3 Cent US $56.55
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![]() One Roll of 50 Silver Mercury DImes G to XF US $76.00
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![]() 5 ROLLS MIXED MERCURY ROOSEVELT SILVER DIMES NO JUNK US $56.00
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![]() Unsearched Wheat Cent Rolls Local Estate Collections US $7.99
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![]() 1 MIXED ROLL 50 COINS SILVER DIMES 30 MERCURY P S D AND 20 ROOSEVELT P S D US $149.99
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![]() MIXED LOT OF DIMES 40S 50S 60S 90 SILVER ROLL OF 50 COINS MERCURY US $135.00
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![]() 8 Rolls MERCURY SILVER DIMES $4000 Face Value 90 Silver 400 Coins 8 Roll Lot US $998.62
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![]() roll of 50 US silver mercury silver Roosevelt dimes US $75.00
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![]() UNSEARCHED PENNY ROLL 1879 INDIAN 1908 PL INDIAN CENT END COINS US $41.25
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![]() UNSEARCHED PENNY ROLL 1909 VDB WHEAT 1909 INDIAN CENT END COINS US $26.00
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![]() UNSEARCHED PENNY ROLL SILVER BUST DIME 1909 VDB WHEAT END COINS US $86.00
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![]() WHEAT PENNY ROLL W D S Mint Mercury Dime ends t21 US $.99
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![]() SILVER WHEAT PENNIES COINSCOPPER And ANTIQUE LOT JUNK DRAWER LOT US $20.95
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![]() Unsearched Wheat Roll with Mercury Dime and 1895 Indian Head ends US $9.99
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![]() Unsearched Wheat Roll with Mercury Dime and 1896 Indian Head ends US $9.99
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![]() UNSEARCHED WHEAT ROLL WITH 1909 VDB S AND 1902 INDIAN HEAD ENDS US $24.99
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![]() Unsearched Wheat Indianhead Roll w 1790 VOC Duit 1891 IndianHead Cent L9A US $.99
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Penthouse - Mr. Pink / Mercury Blues - 1986
Alternatives to filling teeth by Mike Scantlebury
Research has shown unusually high levels of mercury in people who have died in recent years. This hasn't come to light before, because it's not 'mercury poisoning' that is written on the Death Certificate. It could be stroke, or heart attack, or embolism. These are the biggest killers in terms of numbers, but the question for many researchers has been, How was the health of these people in the few years before they died? Were they very healthy? Increasingly, the evidence shows that people who appear to have died from a supposedly simple cause, have, in fact, been suffering a range of illnesses and distressing symptoms over a long time. These range from depression, to memory loss, to lack of sleep and low energy levels. Often they are vague and hard to pin down, such as 'metallic taste in the mouth', lethargy and no urge to socialise. The first of these is the clue. Why would people taste metal? The only metal most people in the West have anywhere near their mouths is mercury, the basis of amalgam fillings.
Residents of Europe and the U.S. have got used to the idea that it's a good idea to fill their mouths with metal, yet this is a relatively recent invention. It only goes back to the Victorian age, or the end of the nineteenth century. It then became increasingly popular and became the 'norm' after the Second World War. Perhaps because of the trend for children to eat more sweets, chocolate and cakes once wartime rationing had been phased out, there was a huge increase in the number of cavities suffered by young people. The answer from dentists was to drill out the decay and fill the resulting hole with an amalgam of metal which composed 50% mercury. This was considered to be the hardest substitute known for tooth enamel, and certainly seemed to serve the purpose. Many people born in the 1940s and 1950s will have a large proportion of filled teeth, with hardly any complete and untouched. Only in the last few years has another trend emerged, of using white coloured resin, and usually this has been restricted to the front teeth, where it shows. Dentists, it seems, prefer the hardness of the metal and continue to use it regularly, particularly for the back teeth, partly because it is a cheaper option.
It will come as some surprise to Westerners then, to hear that this totally acceptable feature of our modern life is actually quite new in human history and quite rare in terms of the rest of the world. If there was a problem with practice, then, it would have only been apparent comparatively recently, and only in the countries of the world that use this method of preserving teeth. It's no good asserting that millions of people have mercury-based fillings and it's not doing them any harm. If it was, it might only be now that we would notice. Of course, if it's not on the Death Certificate as a cause of death, then it would be harder to notice. That's similar to Alzheimer's Disease and other dementias. The growth in these diseases has been alarming many researchers, but it is rare to see it given as a cause of death. Usually dementia sufferers become weakened and succumb to other illnesses, such as pneumonia. The figures therefore show that the disease is prevalent and distressing for many individuals and families, but it doesn't appear 'fatal'. That's simply playing with words. Dementias never get better. People who suffer from them, have them until they die. Once you've got it, you never recover. Why shouldn't we think of it as a 'terminal' illness?
The problem, for researchers into the effects of mercury on the body, is that they think they've found a link between dementias and mercury fillings. This is a contentious claim, and it's easy to play 'Top Trumps' with the research findings – you may prefer an established name and respected institution and the research they do, to some of the less formal and less well known studies. Of course, that's not how science works. If a link has been found, then it should be provable in differing settings and with different populations. That research has yet to be done, but there is something that is holding it up. Science is not, as we might expect, totally disinterested and balanced in its view of what needs to be looked into. The fact that research on the effects of mercury needs to be done is not the most important consideration for some academic bodies. They ask, What is the point? Suppose, for example, that it could be proved that there was a link between the mercury in teeth fillings and illness – of any kind – what impact would that have on society? In litigious cultures, such as the U.S.A., it might result in multi-million dollar lawsuits. It might also result in a complete collapse in confidence in the dental profession in the West, the one that has been using mercury amalgam for this generation with such frequency and assurance. It's a well-paid and prestigious career, with good connections to the political and economic elites. How likely is it that these professionals would be prepared to admit that their treatments are misguided and potentially dangerous?
It's an irony to think that the Baby Boomer generation might find themselves dying in swathes not from misuse of illegal drugs, self-indulgent living, or 'sex and drugs and rock and roll', but from the simplest of things – a metal they have been carrying around in their lives since early childhood. Of course, such thoughts may be misguided. Perhaps new research will confirm the industry's confidence that mercury amalgam is a completely inert substance that has none of the poisonous qualities of its major component – mercury, one of the most poisonous metals known, and one that if taken orally is completely and horribly fatal. After all, we now know that the first Emperor of China was smitten with the look, feel and qualities of mercury, so much so that he took small quantities of the liquid metal for his health. It killed him. There's no dispute about that. The argument, from modern dentists and their supporters, is that once the mercury is mixed with its other components, it becomes completely harmless. That is the claim being examined by recent research.
It's worth remembering that this isn't the only debate about the use of metals that has gone on in human history. The Romans used to line their aqueducts with lead to bring water into the city in the first few centuries of this era. We now know that people who drink water flowing across such metal can suffer from many illnesses, including brain damage in children. The Romans didn't know this, but it may be one reason for the decline of their culture. The question many observers are asking is, have we a similar problem here, and is it worth more effort being put into considering the possible problems before more damage is done?
Mike Scantlebury is an Internet Author. He has written plays, stories and novels, but recently has turned to Self Help and health matters. If you want to know if his thoughts on teeth fillings have led to anything, go to his main website and look under the heading 'Unfinished Novels'. There may be a title there, something like 'Filling In'. Find it? Try http://www.mikescantlebury.com
Article Source: http://www.earticlesonline.com/Article/Alternatives-to-filling-teeth/233727


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