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Cook Islands 2020 1 oz .9999 Silver Bounty Ship One Dollar Coin

$39.99
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Canada 400th Anniversary Detroit de Davis Strait 1987 Proof Silver Crown KM 154 Box

$34.99

Weight 23.3 grams of .500 silver for an ASW, actual silver weight, of 0.375 ounce.

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Nicaragua Ibero-American Series Sailboat on Lake Cocibolca 10 Cordobas 2002 Proof Silver

$49.99

This crown is one of ten different coins issued as part of the Iberian-American series of commemortive coins, “La Nautica.” This collection is comprised of ten silver proof coins, depicting ships that made history in each country.

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Sierra Leone Christopher Columbus 1451-1506 $10 2006 Proof Silver Crown COA

$59.99

Sierra Leone – Christopher Columbus 1451-1506 – $10 – 2006 – Proof Silver Crown

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Isle Of Man Commemorating the Voyages of Nansen & his Ship The Fram 1 Crown 1997

$44.99

Fridtjof Nansen (born October 10, 1861 in Store Fren, near Kristiania, now Oslo – died May 13, 1930 in Lysaker, outside Oslo) was a Norwegian explorer, scientist and diplomat. Nansen was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1922 for his work as a League of Nations High Commissioner. Nansen had the polar vessel “Fram” built with a rounded hull, designed so as to prevent the ice from pressing it down. In 1893, Nansen allowed the “Fram” to be frozen into the drift ice north of Siberia in the hope that it would drift over or close to the North Pole. However, it soon became evident that the ship was drifting too far south. With one companion, Hjalmar Johansen, Nansen left the “Fram” and the rest of the crew, and set off to ski to the North Pole. They got further north than anyone had been before, but drifting ice and lack of food forced them to turn back and seek the mainland. They survived two winters by shooting walruses and polar bears. By an incredible stroke of luck, they stumbled across a British expedition, headed by Frederick George Jackson, on Frans Josefs Land, which took them back to Norway. The “Fram” also reached home safely with its whole crew intact. Although the North Pole had not been reached, Nansen was celebrated as a polar hero to an even greater extent than before, both nationally and internationally. In Kristiania he was received at the palace by King Oscar, and on the palace balcony accepted the plaudits of the enormous crowd assembled outside.

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