|
Although in their registries they show as supplied
in 1991, all that was for the purpose of having them prepared for their
issuance on the indicated date; therefore, it remains to the judgement of
each one to include them or not in their collections, but in this
cataloging, through legal and practical questions, it is understood that
the correct information is that they were issued in 1992.
The B.C.R.A. decided to introduce some modifications
in the banknotes of this monetary line for innovative purposes; providing
them with better security measures but without altering the principal
intentions; maintaining the size and the predominant colors, presenting
paper weighing 90g/m2 in place of 83g/m2; three-colored, invisible
security fibers; watermarks on all three denominations, security threads
from $10 to $100; and the redesigning of security measures, numeration,
and the portraits of San Martin and Manuel Belgrano.
The $2 Peso denomination has been in circulation
since November, 1997, and during 1998 the remaining denominations will be
issued, beginning with the $10 in January. Although at this moment
those new bills are added to the list following the previous ones, it
stands to reason that we are talking about a single recent case in its
beginning since for the future and when the rest of the denominations
appear, it is understood that they should be grouped separately, being
that they will be the object of another collection by its type.
The following oral cataloging of this monetary line
is offered:
(*)"Recovery" run
(**)Last banknotes issued in this value since
they were replaced by coins, and , as a consequence, taken out of
circulation.
100 Pesos Beginning with No. 23.200.001/A printing
differences on the obverse side are presented. These refer to the
small rose that the concealed image contains and the vestment of the
effigy of the president Julio A. Roco. All of this obeys changes
introduced by the Mint to improve the quality of printing by Communication
"B"5115 of the B.C.R.A.
Likewise by means of Communication "C"7160, the
B.C.R.A. made it known that it has detected the circulation of $100
banknotes, legitimate ones, that present a printing mistake. It
concerns a run of specimens that, due to a mechanical difference in one of
the printing sequences, lacks the hidden number "100" to the right of the
portrait that reacts with marked yellow fluorescence under ultraviolet
light.
Source: Cuadernos de Numismatica y Ciencias Historicas, Tomo
XXIV, No. 106, December 1997.
Courtesy: Carlos A. Graziadio |