✨ New Arrivals Just Dropped!Explore

1 / 2
2005 Kyle, SK, Wooly Mammoth Centennial $3 Trade Token
2005 Kyle, SK, Woolly Mammoth Centennial $3 Trade Token
Kyle is a town of about 400 people in southwestern Saskatchewan. In 1964, the skeletal remains of a 12,000-year-old woolly mammoth was discovered during road construction. This copper token, worth $3 at Kyle's centennial celebration in 2005, proclaims the town the "Home of the Woolly Mammoth."
Kyle is a town of about 400 people in southwestern Saskatchewan. In 1964, the skeletal remains of a 12,000-year-old woolly mammoth was discovered during road construction. This copper token, worth $3 at Kyle's centennial celebration in 2005, proclaims the town the "Home of the Woolly Mammoth."
2005 Kyle, SK, Woolly Mammoth Centennial $3 Trade Token
Kyle is a town of about 400 people in southwestern Saskatchewan. In 1964, the skeletal remains of a 12,000-year-old woolly mammoth was discovered during road construction. This copper token, worth $3 at Kyle's centennial celebration in 2005, proclaims the town the "Home of the Woolly Mammoth."
Kyle is a town of about 400 people in southwestern Saskatchewan. In 1964, the skeletal remains of a 12,000-year-old woolly mammoth was discovered during road construction. This copper token, worth $3 at Kyle's centennial celebration in 2005, proclaims the town the "Home of the Woolly Mammoth."
$14.50
2005 Kyle, SK, Wooly Mammoth Centennial $3 Trade Token—
$14.50
Description
2005 Kyle, SK, Woolly Mammoth Centennial $3 Trade Token
Kyle is a town of about 400 people in southwestern Saskatchewan. In 1964, the skeletal remains of a 12,000-year-old woolly mammoth was discovered during road construction. This copper token, worth $3 at Kyle's centennial celebration in 2005, proclaims the town the "Home of the Woolly Mammoth."
Kyle is a town of about 400 people in southwestern Saskatchewan. In 1964, the skeletal remains of a 12,000-year-old woolly mammoth was discovered during road construction. This copper token, worth $3 at Kyle's centennial celebration in 2005, proclaims the town the "Home of the Woolly Mammoth."




