
Cook Islands. Two dollars 2019. Titanium silver .925. 1/2-ounce. 50 millimeters. Silk finish. Mintage: 2,500. B. H. Mayer’s Kunstprägeanstalt, Munich.
Description of the Coin
The blank is split by an artificial crack, which almost reaches the coin’s centre. In this crack, there is a piece of the Estacado meteorite.

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The obverse shows the mountain landscape of Llano Estacado traversed by the Canadian River. In the upper field is a round depression with the portrait of Elizabeth II, and below, IRB (Ian Rank-Broadley). Around it is the legend ELIZABETH II 2 DOLLARS COOK ISLANDS 2019, and to the right, 1/2 oz Titanium Silver .925.
On the reverse is the blue planet, Earth, depicted on a black background in the lower half, while the crack holding the meteorite aims toward it. Above, is the Lone Star of Texas on a white-blue background and the legend ESTACADO METEORITE / HALE CO, TEXAS, USA, 1833.
Background
Those who visit the Hall of Meteorites in the Museum of Natural History in New York are irresistibly attracted to the meteorite Estacado. This H6 meteorite was found in Texas in 1883. It landed in an area called Hale County today, which is located in Llano Estacado.
New York is not the only place where you can see parts of this object, which is four billion years old, as the collection of the Smithsonian Museum and the collection of the Natural History Museum in London also own parts of it. With the new issue of the Meteorite Impact series of CIT Coin Invest AG, 2,500 further meteorite collectors will be able to obtain a piece of the Estacado meteorite to which this latest addition to the series is dedicated.
This series has become highly successful due to the fact that CIT Coin Invest AG applies new and highly advanced technology for the production of each issue. There is only one detail that always remains the same: Each coin contains a part of the meteorite it is named after. Already two issues of the series, which started in 2004, have been honoured with an award.
In 2019, CIT Coin Invest AG continues to break new ground: For the first time, an artificial edge crack traverses the field. This is an enhancement of the artificial breakthroughs that can be admired on the meteorite coins since 2016. Additionally, thanks to smartminting technology, this issue’s diameter of 50 millimeters is significantly larger without increasing the weight. And, last but not least, for the first time a new alloy is being used: Titanium silver.
Thanks to a subtle use of colour and a complex finish, this coin is a work of art as well as a symbol for the beauty and the vulnerability of our blue planet, and for our close connection with the infinite universe, which is older than a human being can imagine. The fact that a part of this coin is four billion years old is simply incredible.
For further information about this coin, please click here.
Press release courtesy of Coin Invest Trust.
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