Skip to content
Precious Metals Data Aggregator
Loading market data...

Secrets of Snow 20 Euro Silver Coin P

Material
Silver
Category
Coins
Fineness (‰)
0.92500
Mass (g)
22.420
Premium (%)
Unknown
Price
Unknown
Dealer
Muenze Oesterreich
Dealer country
Unknown
Last price update
Unknown
Last seen
Unknown
Available until
Capsule size (mm)
Coin design
Core
Delivery
Denomination
Depth (%)
Details
Diameter (mm)
Dimensions
Edge
Engraver
Extra property
Extra property
Extra property
Face value
Fine weight (g)
Finish
Fluorescence
Grade
Grader
Guard
Has certificate
Heads
Inner Pack Qty
In stock
In stock quantity
Insurance
Is deliverable
Is for delivery only
Is IRA eligible
Is LSP
Is numbered ingot
Issue date
Is under seal
Keywords
Main base metal
Mintage
Mintage proof
Mintage special uncirculated
Mintage uncirculated
Minting year(s)
Mint mark
Numista ID
Occasion
Outer Pack Qty
Package dimensions
Packaging
Producer
Proportions
Purity
Quality
Ring
Series
Shipping
SKU
Symmetry
Table (%)
Tails
Taxation
Theme
Thickness (mm)
Product country
Safe location

“It snows! it snows! from out the sky, the feathered flakes, how fast they fly. Like little birds that don’t know why, they’re on the chase, from place to place, while neither can the other trace. It snows! It snows! a merry play is o’er us, on this heavy day!” Yet beneath the seemingly chaotic nature of snowfall, so beautifully captured by American poet Hannah Flagg Gould (1789–1865), lies a surprising symmetry. German astronomer and mathematician Johannes Kepler (1571–1630) pondered this with childlike curiosity when snow began to fall as he was walking across Charles Bridge in Prague in 1610. This experience prompted him to write the first scientific treatise on snow crystals, *Strena Seu De Nive Sexangula*, in which he asks why when snowflakes fall, although each one is different from the next, they are always hexagonal in shape. A simple enough question, but one that no one had ever asked before and one that was not answered for another three hundred years. Nonetheless, in trying to answer it, Kepler provided some fascinating insights into snowflakes and asked some pertinent questions about physics, mathematics and biology. The life of a snowflake may seem inconsequential, but *Secrets of Snow* turns it into something momentous. The obverse of the coin features a magnification of a snow crystal with an ice-blue gemstone in its centre and polished edges. A young woman is shown in profile on the coin’s reverse. A manifestation of winter, she is a snow princess adorned in a crown and a cloak, both decorated with snow crystals. The background is partially polished around her crown and on the lower right-hand side.