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'Like any other one dollar coin, the cycle of a Donation Dollar is ongoing, as is its potential for positive impact.' The Mint is set to produce 25million coins, one for every Australian resident ...
REVEALED: The 25million new $1 coins with a GREEN centre - and they come inscribed with a generous message. The Royal Australian Mint has coined the 'Donation Dollar' with a green centre ...
“If your 2000-dated coin does have the double rim on the Queen’s head side then what you have is a $1/10c mule, a variety of the Australian dollar coin that’s worth well over face value ...
“If your 2000-dated coin does have the double rim on the Queen’s head side then what you have is a $1/10c mule, a variety of the Australian dollar coin that’s worth well over face value ...
Aussies are being warned to watch out for a $1 coin being falsely listed online as “rare” and selling for thousands of dollars more than it’s really worth.
The King will appear on 10 million one-dollar coins in Australia, with his effigy to be put in circulation before Christmas, the country’s government has announced. The monarch’s effigy was ...
The King will appear on 10 million one dollar coins in Australia with his effigy to be put in circulation before Christmas, the country’s government announced. Charles’ effigy was designed by ...
Check your $1 coins, they could be worth a motza. Get out your piggy banks and smash them open, because you could be holding onto a rare Australian $1 coin that is worth thousands of dollars.
King Charles III will appear on 10 million one-dollar coins in Australia, with his effigy to be put in circulation before Christmas, the country’s government announced.
One-dollar coins will be the first to feature King Charles III and they will begin appearing in tills and at banks across the country before Christmas this year. Treasury Assistant Minister Andrew ...
On the one hand, it costs only 5 cents to produce a $1 bill and 18 cents to produce a $1 coin, the report states. But the lifespan of a $1 bill is much shorter -- 4.8 years compared to 30 years.
ON 20 JUNE 1988, the original $2 bank note was replaced by the $2 coin we have today, which features an Aboriginal elder set against a background of the southern cross and a native grass tree..
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