Zimbabwe $0.05 Coins in 1999 and 2014
In Zimbabwe the answer is a rabbit on one side and a bird of prey om the other - for the older-but-not-too-old coins (1999-ish). The bond coins (2014 was the example I used) just have the denomination and year in a glossy finish.
There are multiple animals on 5 cent coins depending on the country and time period such as the Buffalo on the US "buffalo nickel", the Beaver on the Canadian nickel, etc.
On the NZ two dollar coin the animal is a white heron
An echidna is on the five cent coin.
Peacock.
horse
41 degrees Celsius equals 105.8 degrees Fahrenheit.
I have one as well....all I can tell you is that there is a date on the saide of the coin that is 5c it is in the corner of the flowers and the coin I have 1923 tests to be silver
Australia does not have nickels. Its currency is dollars and cents.However, the closest equivalent to the American nickel is the 5c piece, and on this coin is the echidna.
The only animal to appear on the 5c coin in US currency is the buffalo (1913-1938) Canadian 5c coins normally have a picture of a beaver building a dam, although special commemoratives issued during the 1967 Centennial carry a picture of a snowshoe hare. Australian 5c coins have a picture of an echidna, which is an unusual egg-laying mammal found only in that country. New Zealand 5c coins carried a picture of a reptile called a tuatara. The denomination was eliminated in 2006 due to low purchasing power.
In New Zealand It is a Tuatara, but they have recently abolished the five cent coin.
about 25 cents.
15.386.000 coins were struck of this type. Value: about 10 dollars.
a coin? not a coin....
This coin does not exist. The platypus is on the 20c coin, and is worth 20 cents. The 5c coin has an echidna on it, and is worth five Australian cents.
a loin is on the ten cent coin In Australia the animal on the coin is a lyre bird.
On the NZ two dollar coin the animal is a white heron
5c =41f=278k
It is probably a merchant's token, common in the 19th century, or possibly a pawnbrokers token. In view of the reference to "5c", and that it is in English, it is most likely from the USA or Canada.