This is in almost uncirculated state (now NCG graded as CH AU), and from just about the time Alexander the Great was dying on his way back from India in drunken frustration. I typed "Amphipolis" in the video but this was minted in Pella, it is a fairly rare variety identified by the "bee alighting on a flower" on the reverse. (Price 206b or Müller 856).
Ours is unfortunately not centered on the reverse so the bird on Zeus' hand and the bee and the flower as well as the "A" in "Alexander" are cut off. But the obverse is well centered, and the whole coin has near perfect surfaces.
Yes, Zeus must have eaten right and gotten daily exercise to look like that at his age.
Coins looking like this got minted around the Greek world for 200+ years after Alexander died, some still saying "Alexander" on the back. Similarly, folks kept minting "Philip" of Macedon tetradrachms for a long time after both of them were dead.
These coins weigh more than a U.S. half dollar but are about the same diameter as a quarter. They are really thick, and the relief is extremely high. You could never "stack" ancient coins like this, because they do not have any flat surface to lay the next coin onto. They are ancient sculptures, and the exceptionally preserved ones are better preserved than many marble statutes from the same time. This coin is almost 2340 years old in 2016.
Other examples of the same coin:
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