Main.2004IditarodMedallion History
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September 05, 2016, at 11:34 AM
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%lfloat%(:hslide Full_Set_027a.jpg | 2004 Iditarod Medallion, back. Click for larger image. | 2004 Iditarod Medallion, back.:)%rfloat%(:hslide Full_Set_039a.jpg |2004 Iditarod Medallion, front. Click for larger image. | 2004 Iditarod Medallion, front.:)
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%lfloatrfloat%(:hslide Full_Set_027a.jpg | 2004 Iditarod Medallion, back. Click for larger image. | 2004 Iditarod Medallion, back.:)%rfloatlfloat%(:hslide Full_Set_039a.jpg |2004 Iditarod Medallion, front. Click for larger image. | 2004 Iditarod Medallion, front.:)
September 28, 2011, at 11:04 AM
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%center%%blue%'''$115.00'''
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%center%%blue%'''$115.00135.00'''
April 08, 2011, at 10:25 PM
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- April 08, 2011, at 10:25 PM
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%center%%blue%'''$85.00'''
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%center%%blue%'''$85.00115.00'''
August 22, 2008, at 11:02 PM
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Silver in Photographs: The photographic process is based on the presence of silver halide crystals suspended on an unexposed film, which, when exposed to light, are set in such a way that they are selectively reducible to metallic silver by agents called developers. Approximately 5,000 color photographs can be taken using one ounce of silver.
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'''Silver in Photographs: TheTrivia:'''
The photographic process is based on the presence of silver halide crystals suspended on an unexposed film, which, when exposed to light, are set in such a way that they are selectively reducible to metallic silver by agents called developers. Approximately 5,000 color photographs can be taken using one ounce of silver.
The photographic process is based on the presence of silver halide crystals suspended on an unexposed film, which, when exposed to light, are set in such a way that they are selectively reducible to metallic silver by agents called developers. Approximately 5,000 color photographs can be taken using one ounce of silver.
July 25, 2008, at 11:08 PM
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!2004 Iditarod Medallion
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July 25, 2008, at 11:01 PM
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%center%(:includeurl http://www.alaskamedallions.com/Main/2004IditarodMedallionpay?action=source:)
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%center%(:includeurl http://www.alaskamedallions.com/Main/2004IditarodMedallionpay?action=source:)(:includeurl http://www.alaskamedallions.com/Main/Showcart?action=source:)
July 24, 2008, at 01:46 AM
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%center%(:includeurl http://www.mushroomvideos.com/alaskamedallions/Main/2004IditarodMedallionpay?action=source:)
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%center%(:includeurl http://www.mushroomvideos.com/alaskamedallions/Main/2004IditarodMedallionpay?action//www.alaskamedallions.com/Main/2004IditarodMedallionpay?action=source:)
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July 23, 2008, at 02:19 AM
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(:title Alaska Medallions - 2004 Iditarod Medallion:)
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(:title Alaska Medallions - 2004 Iditarod Medallion:)
July 23, 2008, at 02:08 AM
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Although a wide variety of other technology is available, silver-based photography will retain its pre-eminence due to its superior definition and low cost. From its very outset, silver halide has been the material that records what is to be seen in the photograph. As little as 4 photons of light activate silver halides, which amplify that incident light by a factor of one billion times. In today's photography, silver halides are coupled with dyes that bring the color of the world around us into permanent record. An estimated 205 million troy ounces of silver were used worldwide in 2002 for photographic purpose.
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Although a wide variety of other technology is available, silver-based photography will retain its pre-eminence due to its superior definition and low cost. From its very outset, silver halide has been the material that records what is to be seen in the photograph. As little as 4 photons of light activate silver halides, which amplify that incident light by a factor of one billion times. In today's photography, silver halides are coupled with dyes that bring the color of the world around us into permanent record. An estimated 205 million troy ounces of silver were used worldwide in 2002 for photographic purpose.
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July 21, 2008, at 11:04 PM
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July 21, 2008, at 07:27 PM
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July 21, 2008, at 05:23 PM
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(:hslide Full_Set_027a.jpg | 2004 Iditarod Medallion, back. Click for larger image. | 2004 Iditarod Medallion, back.:)(:hslide Full_Set_039a.jpg |2004 Iditarod Medallion, front. Click for larger image. | 2004 Iditarod Medallion, front.:)
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July 15, 2008, at 09:26 PM
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(:hslide Full_Set_027a.jpg | 2004 Iditarod Medallion, front. Click for larger image. | 2004 Iditarod Medallion, front.:)(:hslide Full_Set_039a.jpg |2004 Iditarod Medallion, back. Click for larger image. | 2004 Iditarod Medallion, back.:)
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(:hslide Full_Set_027a.jpg | 2004 Iditarod Medallion, front.back. Click for larger image. | 2004 Iditarod Medallion, front.back.:)(:hslide Full_Set_039a.jpg |2004 Iditarod Medallion, back.front. Click for larger image. | 2004 Iditarod Medallion, back.front.:)
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July 15, 2008, at 01:39 PM
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The first running of the race began on March 3 of 1973, and ended one month later on April 3, in Nome. Today, the race is run the same distance, but in about one third of the time. The Iditarod has been ran each year since its inaugural race, and in 1976 Congress designated the Iditarod route a National Historic Trail. The trail follows the old mail route from Knik to Nome, forged in 1910.
The Iditarod Trail crosses two mountain ranges, follows the Yukon River for about 150 miles, passes many bush villages, and extends across the pack ice of Norton Sound. The Iditarod is only a winter trail because the ground is covered with muskeg swamps in the summer. The trail was the spotlight of national attention in 1925 when sled dog mushers, including Leonard Seppala and his lead dog Balto, mushed 30,000 units of life-saving diphtheria serum to an epidemic in Nome. Each year the Iditarod follows an alternating southern or northern route. While the route is traditionally described as 1049 miles long, (because Alaska is the 49th state of the Union) the trail distance varies slightly each year due to safety hazards and is actually closer to 1,100 miles from start to finish.
The Iditarod Sled Dog Race is known as "The last great race on earth," and stretches over 1,000 miles across Alaska's frozen wilderness from Anchorage to Nome. The first race to Nome, organized by the late Knik resident, Joe Reddington Sr., and the late historian from Wasila, Dorothy Page, took place in March of 1973.
The Official Iditarod Medallion is the most limited mintage of all Alaska medallions. It contains one ounce of .999 Fine Silver, individually serial numbered, with a limited mintage of 3,500 pieces. The Iditarod medallion is second only to the Official State Medallion series for after market demand and price appreciation potential.
The Iditarod Trail crosses two mountain ranges, follows the Yukon River for about 150 miles, passes many bush villages, and extends across the pack ice of Norton Sound. The Iditarod is only a winter trail because the ground is covered with muskeg swamps in the summer. The trail was the spotlight of national attention in 1925 when sled dog mushers, including Leonard Seppala and his lead dog Balto, mushed 30,000 units of life-saving diphtheria serum to an epidemic in Nome. Each year the Iditarod follows an alternating southern or northern route. While the route is traditionally described as 1049 miles long, (because Alaska is the 49th state of the Union) the trail distance varies slightly each year due to safety hazards and is actually closer to 1,100 miles from start to finish.
The Iditarod Sled Dog Race is known as "The last great race on earth," and stretches over 1,000 miles across Alaska's frozen wilderness from Anchorage to Nome. The first race to Nome, organized by the late Knik resident, Joe Reddington Sr., and the late historian from Wasila, Dorothy Page, took place in March of 1973.
The Official Iditarod Medallion is the most limited mintage of all Alaska medallions. It contains one ounce of .999 Fine Silver, individually serial numbered, with a limited mintage of 3,500 pieces. The Iditarod medallion is second only to the Official State Medallion series for after market demand and price appreciation potential.
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The Official Medallion of the 2004 Iditarod Sled Dog Race
Ed Iten of Kotzebue, Alaska
Seventy to eighty mushers usually take part in the Last Great Race on Earth - the Iditarod, starting in Anchorage the first week of March. They mush along the Iditarod National Historic Trail 1,049 miles to Nome. The
Silver in
Although a wide variety of other technology is available, silver-based photography will retain its pre-eminence due to its superior definition and low cost. From its very outset, silver halide has been the material that records what is to be seen in the photograph. As little as 4 photons of light activate silver halides, which amplify that incident light by a factor of one billion times. In today's photography, silver halides are coupled with dyes that bring the color of the world around us into permanent record. An estimated 205 million troy ounces of silver were used worldwide in 2002 for photographic purpose.
July 15, 2008, at 01:18 PM
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Text here.
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The Iditarod Trail crosses two mountain ranges, follows the Yukon River for about 150 miles, passes many bush villages, and extends across the pack ice of Norton Sound. The Iditarod is only a winter trail because the ground is covered with muskeg swamps in the summer. The trail was the spotlight of national attention in 1925 when sled dog mushers, including Leonard Seppala and his lead dog Balto, mushed 30,000 units of life-saving diphtheria serum to an epidemic in Nome. Each year the Iditarod follows an alternating southern or northern route. While the route is traditionally described as 1049 miles long, (because Alaska is the 49th state of the Union) the trail distance varies slightly each year due to safety hazards and is actually closer to 1,100 miles from start to finish.
The Iditarod Sled Dog Race is known as "The last great race on earth," and stretches over 1,000 miles across Alaska's frozen wilderness from Anchorage to Nome. The first race to Nome, organized by the late Knik resident, Joe Reddington Sr., and the late historian from Wasila, Dorothy Page, took place in March of 1973.
The Official Iditarod Medallion is the most limited mintage of all Alaska medallions. It contains one ounce of .999 Fine Silver, individually serial numbered, with a limited mintage of 3,500 pieces. The Iditarod medallion is second only to the Official State Medallion series for after market demand and price appreciation potential.
July 15, 2008, at 09:20 AM
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!2004 Iditarod Medallion
July 14, 2008, at 11:20 PM
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(:keywords Alaska Medallion, Alaska, 2004 Iditarod, Alaska silver:)
(:description The 2004 Iditarod Medallion - 1 Ounce .999 Alaska-mined silver.:)
(:title Alaska Medallions - 2004 Iditarod Medallion:)
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(:description The 2004 Iditarod Medallion - 1 Ounce .999 Alaska-mined silver.:)
(:title Alaska Medallions - 2004 Iditarod Medallion:)
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