
Archived
$100 Gold Coin - 10th Anniversary of Nunavut (2009)
2007
Mintage 4,000
Archived
$100 Gold Coin - 10th Anniversary of Nunavut (2009)
2007
Mintage 4,000
$404.81 USD
Masters Club:
5,800
Status: CAN & US shipping only
Availability:
Out of stock in stores
About
$100 Gold Coin - 10th Anniversary of Nunavut (2009)
For centuries, the Aboriginal peoples of Canada's east coast enjoyed the bounty of the Atlantic Ocean, but when Italian explorer Giovanni Cabotto (John Cabot) discovered that fish could be scooped up by the bucketful just off shore from the New World, virtually allof Europe took notice.
It was 1497. Faced with 150 meatless days sanctioned bythe Catholic Church, Europeans embraced this new, seemingly endless supply of Atlantic Cod. Within decades, the French, Portuguese, Spanish and English were fishing off the shores of what is now Newfoundlandand Labrador, brought here by ships that left theirhome ports in the spring and returned to Europe in the fall.
By the beginning of the 19th century, a string of communities was emerging along the coast as hundreds of families soughtto harvest wealth from the sea. Their unique fishing culture proved to be incredibly self-reliant as they developed tools and techniques that were perfectly adapted to their special relationship with the Atlantic Cod.
Invented in the early 1870's, the cod trap was so effective that it remained in use virtually unchanged for over a century. And despite the powerful shipsand dragging nets that appeared after the Second World War, it is the image of fishermen hauling nets over the side of their boat that endures for this historic industry that shaped much of Atlantic North America.
Special features:
• Third issue in the Historical Commerce series.
Packaging:
Coin encapsulated and presented in a maroon clamshell case lined with flock and protected by a black sleeve.
It was 1497. Faced with 150 meatless days sanctioned bythe Catholic Church, Europeans embraced this new, seemingly endless supply of Atlantic Cod. Within decades, the French, Portuguese, Spanish and English were fishing off the shores of what is now Newfoundlandand Labrador, brought here by ships that left theirhome ports in the spring and returned to Europe in the fall.
By the beginning of the 19th century, a string of communities was emerging along the coast as hundreds of families soughtto harvest wealth from the sea. Their unique fishing culture proved to be incredibly self-reliant as they developed tools and techniques that were perfectly adapted to their special relationship with the Atlantic Cod.
Invented in the early 1870's, the cod trap was so effective that it remained in use virtually unchanged for over a century. And despite the powerful shipsand dragging nets that appeared after the Second World War, it is the image of fishermen hauling nets over the side of their boat that endures for this historic industry that shaped much of Atlantic North America.
Special features:
• Third issue in the Historical Commerce series.
Packaging:
Coin encapsulated and presented in a maroon clamshell case lined with flock and protected by a black sleeve.
Specifications
Product Number
6210007
Mintage
4,000
Composition
91.67% gold, 8.33 % silver
Weight
16 g
Edge
reeded
Certificate
serialized
Face Value
200 dollars
Finish
proof
Series
Historical Trade Series (2005 - 2009)
Artist
John Mardon
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