Cook Islands issued a prolific series of wildlife-themed gold coins throughout the early 1990s, many struck at the Pobjoy Mint and marketed aggressively through Franklin Mint-adjacent distribution channels. The sea otter issue appeared the same year the Convention on Biological Diversity entered into force — the otter itself had recovered substantially from near-extinction by Russian and American fur traders who reduced Pacific populations to perhaps 1,000–2,000 animals by the early 20th century. Whether conservation timing was deliberate or incidental to the series schedule is unclear.
The .583 fineness is characteristic of this Cook Islands wildlife run — a legal-tender face value backed by gold content calculated to maximize collector margin rather than bullion value.
Cook Islands issued a prolific series of wildlife-themed gold coins throughout the early 1990s, many struck at the Pobjoy Mint and marketed aggressively through Franklin Mint-adjacent distribution channels. The sea otter issue appeared the same year the Convention on Biological Diversity entered into force — the otter itself had recovered substantially from near-extinction by Russian and American fur traders who reduced Pacific populations to perhaps 1,000–2,000 animals by the early 20th century. Whether conservation timing was deliberate or incidental to the series schedule is unclear.
The .583 fineness is characteristic of this Cook Islands wildlife run — a legal-tender face value backed by gold content calculated to maximize collector margin rather than bullion value.