Difference between revisions of "Australia 2014 dollar"

From CoinVarieties
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(added link)
(added link)
Line 18: Line 18:
 
* [[Australia 2012-P dollar KM-1664|2012-P dollar, Year of the Dragon, 1 oz silver]]
 
* [[Australia 2012-P dollar KM-1664|2012-P dollar, Year of the Dragon, 1 oz silver]]
 
* [[Australia 2014 10 cents|2014 10 cents]]
 
* [[Australia 2014 10 cents|2014 10 cents]]
 +
* [[Australia 2014-P dollar KM-2165|2014-P dollar, wedge-tailed eagle, 1 oz silver]]
 
* [[Australia 2014-P 100 dollars KM-2126|2014-P 100 dollars, 1 oz gold kangaroo]]
 
* [[Australia 2014-P 100 dollars KM-2126|2014-P 100 dollars, 1 oz gold kangaroo]]
 
* [[Australia 2015-P 15 dollars|2015-P 15 dollars, Battle of the Coral Sea]]
 
* [[Australia 2015-P 15 dollars|2015-P 15 dollars, Battle of the Coral Sea]]

Revision as of 20:19, 24 August 2022

a typical circulated specimen, from the Mountain Groan Collection
Australia 2014 dollar rev DSLR.jpg

In 1966, Australia abandoned the sterling coinage she had used since the days of Captain Cook and adopted the decimal dollar and cent. The one dollar coin was introduced in 1984 to supersede a banknote which was wearing out too quickly. The reverse is still in use altho a new bust of the queen was used in 1985 and revised again in 2000. Coinage production, formerly divided among the Sydney, Perth and Melbourne mints, is now concentrated at the Canberra Mint. The Perth mint manufactures and markets commemoratives. This commemorates the centennial of ANZAC, the Australian-New Zealand army of 1914-15 that was raised, trained and sent to Gallipoli to be slaughtered. This type was scheduled to be produced 2014-18.

Recorded mintage: 21,830,500, no proofs.

Specification: 9 g, aluminum-bronze, 25 mm diameter.

Catalog reference: KM unlisted.

Source:

  • Michael, Thomas, and Tracy L. Schmidt, Standard Catalog of World Coins, 2001-Date, 13th ed., Iola, WI: Krause Publications, 2018.
  • McDonald, Greg, The Pocket Guide to Australian Coins and Banknotes, 23rd ed., Lavington, Australia, 2017.

Link to: