Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The twelve-sided Australian fifty-cent coin is the third-highest denomination coin of the Australian dollar and the largest in terms of size in circulation. It is equal in size and shape to the Cook Island $5 coin , and both remain the only 12-sided coins in the southern hemisphere.
Coins of the Australian dollar are circulated with different designs depicting various anniversaries or significant Australian events, these differing coin designs being labelled Australian commemorative coins. Typically, only the 20c, 50c, $1 and $2 coins have been minted in commemoration.
A special 2c coin was released, showcasing one of Stuart Devlin's alternative designs. Many commemorative versions of the 50c coin have been placed in general circulation since 1970. The first $1 coin commemorative issue was in 1986, the first 20c commemorative issue in 1995, and the first $2 commemorative issue in 2012. Mintages reported for ...
Market prices as at June 2018 are about $7/kg for copper and $15/kg for nickel, making the metal content of the 5c coin worth only 2.5c or 50% of its face value (about the same as for a 10c or 20c coin). The production cost of the coin was 12c in 2022. [7] 5c coins are legal tender for amounts not exceeding $5 for any payment of a debt. [8]
The settlers did have some George III one-penny coins, which were referred to as "Cartwheel pennies". These were the first British coins to be officially exported to the Australian colonies, and so can be considered Australia's first official coins. They were dated 1797 and 1799, with Britannia on one side and King George III on the other.
Pre-decimal Australian coins remain legal tender for 10 cents per shilling. Before 2006 the old New Zealand 5, 10 and 20 cent coins were often mistaken for Australian coins of the same value, and vice versa, and therefore circulated in both countries. The UK replaced these coins with smaller versions from 1990 to 1993, as did New Zealand in 2006.
The round fifty cent coin was the highest-denomination and largest diameter coin of the Australian decimal coins, introduced in 1966. It has a nominal value of half an Australian dollar, equivalent to five shillings in the pre-decimal accounting system. Due to the large number minted in 1966, and the rising cost of silver, it was not made in ...
File:Bc0036 50c 2005.jpg; File:British fifty pence coin 1982 reverse.png; File:British fifty pence coin 2015 obverse.png; File:British fifty pence coin 2015 reverse.png; File:British fifty pence Scouting coin.jpg