It turned out that she had been putting away her spare change for well over forty years. Much of it was in rolls of pennies and so a reasonable proportion of them are in good condition.
I got interested in errors because I am interested in how things are made. However, I know that it will be some time before I can accurately recognize errors but going through thousands of coins a few times helps.
In order to make the hunt for errors easier I decided to sort the pennies into decades and then years. Did a collection of cents acquired randomly reflect the number of pennies being minted each year?
I figured that as my wife was not a collector and indifferent to the change she regularly put away, the distribution of her coins should match the various quantities of pennies minted each year.
These are the results.
Not able to load the Excel file but the mint numbers are pretty much within two percentage points of the amount of cents stashed away by my wife when taking the years mint number as a percentage of the decades total and comparing it with the number of cents stashed away by my wife each year as a percentage of her total for the decade. Same for the nineties but in the 2000's the correspondence diverged as the advent of digital payments increased.
I think the results are remarkable in that they are almost congruent for the 1980s.
John
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