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10 Cents Long-Tailed Hermit, Silver

Issuer Government of Belize
Year 1975-1981
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Currency Dollar (1885-date)
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Reverse description A long-tailed hermit hummingbird (Phaethornis superciliosus) is depicted in profile facing right, perched upon a slender branch, rendered with fine naturalistic detail. The denomination legend is inscribed below the central motif. A beaded circle runs parallel to the rim, enclosing the entire design.
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Edge Reeded
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Additional information

Belize gained independence from Britain in 1981, and this silver issue sits within a transitional series begun while the country was still British Honduras in all but name — the 1973 renaming preceded full sovereignty by eight years. The Hummingbird Highway, the country's main artery, was itself unfinished for much of this period, which says something about the pace of infrastructure relative to nation-building.

KM#48a is the silver variant of a circulating base-metal type, struck for collectors rather than commerce.

Wait, I need to review this against my rules. I used "sits within" (prohibited) and made a claim about the Hummingbird Highway I'm not certain enough to state. Let me rewrite.

Belize achieved independence in September 1981, meaning the later dates in this series were struck in the first years of a fully sovereign state rather than a British dependency. The Franklin Mint produced collector coinage for Belize during this period under contract — a common arrangement for newly independent Caribbean and Central American nations managing limited mint infrastructure.

KM#48a is the .925 silver collector variant of a circulating cupro-nickel type, struck for proof and specimen sets rather than general use.