You can buy this one FS-401 1954 Jefferson Nickel PR67 Re-Engraved Obv Design PCGS # 34552602 + Bonus.

This coin is ready to be shipped. First class 2-5 day Service Tracking included in the price.

Inventory # 34552602

There is no restocking fee on returned coins. 

What we do when we are not selling coins........... Part 8 We research the big questions that effect the most people...... We wanted to know why the Dinosaurs went extinct.

Jason Best Theory One:

Approximately 85 million years ago There was a planet. It was a giant terrestrial planet. Its moon was the planet we call Mars. This planet was 250,000 thousand miles at its equator. Approximately 10 times larger than the Earth. At that time the surface of Mars was smooth and without the largest volcano Olympus Mons.

The Sun had a twin. Which stars like our Sun often do. What happened was the twin had an orbital path that ran between Mars and Saturn. When the twin came past this huge planet it super heated and exploded. The gravity was so strong it squeezed Mars so hard that a volcano was formed. The largest known in our system. 

The core of the Mega planet was pulled out of the planet by our sun and went hurling towards the Sun. The twin's gravity stopped it from being pulled into the Sun. Unfortunately other large pieces of the Mega planet was set on a collision course with Earth. These are the Meteorites that slammed into the Earth causing the death and destruction of life on our planet. 

The Meteorites strikes can be seen from space and it was multiple strikes not just one. The planet we Call Mercury is the core from the Mega Planet.

The event that started it the Twin Sun was pull out of its orbit and ran into another star. This created two huge debris fields. And our Sun has been feeding off of these debris fields ever since. It's the reason the Sun has been getting hotter every year. The debris is the fuel the Sun burns more of every year. And it's the reason the temperature is rising on Earth. This increase isn't caused by humans but by Nature. 

 Thank you,
Jason Best.