thumb|[[Segestan Silver Didrachm, 475–455 BCE, possibly depicting Crinisus in the form of a dog on one side, and Segesta on the other Segestan coins from 475–390 BCE often depict a dog on one side, and a woman's head on the other, which have traditionally been associated with Crinisus and the eponymous Segesta.
Numismatists traditionally considered the woman to depict a local nymph, the eponymous Segesta, though Karl Galinsky argues that it may be the goddess Artemis, who Cicero reported had a famous statue at Segesta. Aphrodite Urania has also been suggested.
