Issued to mark the Third Special World Conference on Conservation held in Amman, Jordan placed itself at the center of an international environmental movement that was, in 1977, still finding its institutional footing following the 1972 Stockholm Conference. The coin was struck in a limited proof edition, positioning Jordan among the small number of Arab states actively using commemorative gold coinage for diplomatic and environmental messaging during this period.
The .900 fine standard follows the classical 19th-century European monetary gold tradition rather than the .9999 purity favored by later bullion programs — a deliberate choice that aligned Jordan's commemoratives with established Western numismatic convention.
Issued to mark the Third Special World Conference on Conservation held in Amman, Jordan placed itself at the center of an international environmental movement that was, in 1977, still finding its institutional footing following the 1972 Stockholm Conference. The coin was struck in a limited proof edition, positioning Jordan among the small number of Arab states actively using commemorative gold coinage for diplomatic and environmental messaging during this period.
The .900 fine standard follows the classical 19th-century European monetary gold tradition rather than the .9999 purity favored by later bullion programs — a deliberate choice that aligned Jordan's commemoratives with established Western numismatic convention.