All Australian Coins carry an image of the British monarch on the obverse. There is an Australian design and the denomination on the reverse. The latin terms relating to the monarch were discontinued with the changeover to decimal currency in February 1966.
D G REG F D is heavily abbreviated Latin and, in various forms, has appeared on British coins, and coins of British Empire/Commonwealth countries for hundreds of years. The full Latin text of the legend reads - DEI GRATIA REGINA FIDEI DEFENSOR. DEI GRATIA - by the grace of god REGINA - Queen REX - King FIDEI DEFENSOR - Defender of the Faith
Dei Gratia Regina or D. G. Regina is Latin for "By the Grace of God, Queen". This can be found on almost all Canadian coins bearing Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth the Second, Queen of Canada.
D coins come from Denver, Co
From its initial issue in 1910, until 1915 inclusive, the Australian Threepence was minted at the Royal Mint London and has no mintmark. From 1916 to 1926 inclusive, the Australian Threepence was minted at either the Royal Australian Mint Melbourne or Sydney. Coins minted at the Melbourne Mint have a mintmark "M", coins minted at the Sydney have no mintmark. With a few exceptions, from 1927 to the last minting in 1964, the Australian Threepence was minted at the Royal Australian Mint Melbourne. Coins minted at the Melbourne Mint have a mintmark "M" if they have a mintmark at all. From 1942 until 1951 inclusive, Australian Threepences not minted at the Melbourne Mint exclusively, were minted in addition to the Melbourne coins at the following Mints - 1942 - San Francisco Mint "S", Denver Mint "D" 1943 - San Francisco Mint "S", Denver Mint "D" 1944 - San Francisco Mint "S" 1951 - London Mint "PL"
The Australian 1942 Threepence was minted at one of three mints. The 800,000 coins minted at the Melbourne Mint have no mintmark. The 8 million coins minted at the San Francisco Mint have a small "S" on the reverse below the units digit of the year. The 16 million coins minted at the Denver Mint have a small "D" on the reverse below the units digit of the year. The same applies for all Australian 1943 Threepences.
A 3-D shape with 8 faces is an octahedron.
There are no triangular prisms in faces. Faces are 2-d shapes and these cannot contain 3-d shapes in them.
6 faces :D
There are no triangular prisms in faces. Faces are 2-d shapes and these cannot contain 3-d shapes in them.
i don't really know how much it would be worth but alot of coins have d g Regina so it could be a 50 cent coin or a quarter or even $1
Any 1942, 1943 or 1944 Australian Threepence, will have the "S" (San Francisco) or "D" (Denver) mintmark on the reverse of the coin, on the right hand side, just below the fourth digit of the year. Any coins minted in Melbourne will have no mintmark.
Some faces are: :) :( =D =P ;) etc.