http://www.mint.ca/store/dyn/PDFs/RCMin ... rch_27.pdf
Just calculating out some numbers out loud for the year 2013:
"The Mint recovered and sold 1,278.4 metric tonnes of nickel and 228.0 metric tonnes of cupronickel compared
to 1,326.5 metric tonnes of nickel and 286.0 metric tonnes of cupronickel in 2012. Revenue from ARP declined
to $29.7 million from $35.6 million in 2012. The decline in revenue reflects the declining volume of alloy coins
in the marketplace and the decline in the price of nickel."
There is only one cupronickel coin made in Canada of course, which is the Canadian nickel made from 1982 to 1999. 228 tonnes = 502,650 pounds
= 50,265,000 five cent cupronickels (1982 to 1999 and a few 2006) melted down last year.
The pure nickel melted down is much harder to calculate as its spread out mostly between pure nickel five cent, dimes and quarters. But by my guesstimation from straight sorting the ARP should have gotten about 1/3rd the amount of pre-81 pure nickels as then did cupronickels, so 95 tonnes = 209,440 pounds
= 20,944,000 five cent pure nickels (pre-1981) melted down last year.
And assuming the rest of the pure nickel coinage was mostly dimes and quarters, and that they are roughly equal in circulation per coin and not per weight (which is bad thing to do, but still - its just for rough guesstimation) 1278.4 tonnes - 95 tonnes = 1183.4 tonnes = approximately 850 tonnes quarters and 333.4 tonnes dimes.
= 168,466,000 quarters made of pure nickel (pre-1999) melted down last year.
= 161,206,000 dimes made of pure nickel (pre-1999) melted down last year.