1990-1996 - Elizabeth II - Canadian Cent
In Canada, a penny is a coin worth one cent, or 1⁄100 of a dollar. According to the Royal Canadian Mint, the official national term of the coin is the "one-cent piece", but in practice the terms penny and cent predominate. Originally, "penny" referred to a two-cent coin. When the two-cent coin was discontinued, penny took over as the new one-cent coin's name. Penny was likely readily adopted because the previous coinage in Canada (up to 1858) was the British monetary system, where Canada used British pounds, shillings, and pence as coinage alongside U.S. decimal coins and Spanish milled dollars.
Production of the penny ceased in May 2012, and the Royal Canadian Mint ceased the distribution of them as of February 4, 2013. However, like all discontinued currency in the Canadian monetary system, the coin remains legal tender. Once distribution of the coin ceased, though, vendors no longer were expected to return pennies as change for cash purchases, and were encouraged to round purchases to the nearest nickel. Non-cash transactions are still denominated to the cent.
REF
Source: coinsandcanada.com
Specifications 1 Cent 1995
Alloy: 98% copper, 0.5% tin and 1.5% zinc
Weight: 2.5 grams
Diameter : 19.1 mm (12 sides) thickness: 1.45mm
Engraver: Obverse: Dora de Pédery-Hunt, Aago Aarand, Reverse: G.E.Kruger-Gray
Designer: Obverse: Dora de Pédery-Hunt, Aago Aarand, Reverse: G.E.Kruger-Gray
Edge: Smooth
Magnetism: Nonmagnetic
Die axis: ↑↑
REF
Source: numista.com
1 Cent - Elizabeth II 3rd portrait, 12 sided
KM# 181
Features
Country Canada
Years 1990-1996
Value 1 Cent
0.01 CAD = 0.0093 USD
Metal Bronze (.980 Cu, .005 Sn, .015 Zn)
Weight 2.5 g
Diameter 19.1 mm
Thickness 1.45 mm
Engravers Dora de Pédery-Hunt (obverse)
George Edward Kruger Gray (reverse)
Shape Dodecagonal (12-sided)
Orientation Medal alignment ↑↑
REF
Source: Wikipedia.org
Years 1982–1996
Mass 2.5 g
Diameter/Shape 19.1 mm, 12-sided
Composition 98% copper, 1.75% tin, 0.25% zinc
REF