TEXT B The first coins to appear
in the Western world were issued by the Indians and the Ionian Greeks in the
eighth century B. C. These coins, which were made of electrum, a natural
combination of gold and silver, were irregular in weight and quality. The pure
gold and silver coins with related values which appeared during the reign of
Croesus (560 -546 B. C. ) provide the first un doubted evidence of standard
coinage by state authority. The coins were not perfectly shaped, however, for
they were struck with a hand wielded hammer. The trend toward complete
mathematical symmetry did not, in fact, begin until the coining press, invented
by Leonardo da Vinci in the sixteenth century, was generally used in the middle
of the seventeenth century. One should not assume, however, that
only machine made coins are prized for their workmanship. The silver dekadrachm
from Syracuse, struck about 413 B. C. , is considered one of the finest Greek
coins and is worth more than a thousand dollars today. An artistic masterpiece
of a much later period is the silver taler minted in Ratisbon, southern Germany,
in 1754. The value of a coin is not primarily determined by its
age, as many people seem to think. Many Greek and Roman coins that were issued
in abundance can be purchased for a moderate price. On the other hand, a German
coin made of shrapnel during the First World War is very rare and valuable.
Among the especially rare United States coins are the 1804 silver dollar, the
1822 five-dollar gold piece, and the 1894 silver dime. The author makes it clear that the Syracusan dekadrachm and the German taler mentioned in the passage are ______.
A.handmade Western coins B.worth about a thousand dollars each today C.made out of different metals D.noted for their craftsmanship