Difference between revisions of "Australia 2010 5 cents"
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* [[Australia 2010 dollar KM-1499|2010 dollar, centennial of Girl Guides]] | * [[Australia 2010 dollar KM-1499|2010 dollar, centennial of Girl Guides]] | ||
* [[Australia 2010 100 dollars KM-1365|2010 100 dollars, 1 oz gold kangaroo]] | * [[Australia 2010 100 dollars KM-1365|2010 100 dollars, 1 oz gold kangaroo]] | ||
| + | * [[Australia 2010-P 100 dollars KM-1323|2010-P 100 dollars, Year of the Tiger, 1 oz gold]] | ||
* [[Australia 2011 5 cents|2011 5 cents]] | * [[Australia 2011 5 cents|2011 5 cents]] | ||
* [[Coins and currency dated 2010]] | * [[Coins and currency dated 2010]] | ||
Revision as of 21:46, 31 July 2022
In 1966, Australia abandoned the sterling coinage she had used since the days of Captain Cook and adopted the decimal dollar and cent. This five cent piece was struck since 1999 and is still being struck today. The spiny echidna still curls up on the reverse of current issues. 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.
Recorded mintage: 55,100,000 plus proofs plus 2,040 in silver plus 450 in gold.
Specification: 2.83 g, copper-nickel, 19.4 mm diameter.
Catalog reference: KM 401.
- 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.
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