There are 100 cents in the Australian Dollar.
That can constitute -
20 x 5 cent coins.
10 x 10 cent coins.
5 x 20 cent coins.
2 x 50 cent coins.
1 x 1 Dollar coin.
The 1 and 2 cent coins are no longer in circulation.
The Royal Australian Mint advises that from 1984 to 2009, approximately 754.246 million Australian One Dollar coins have been minted for general circulation.
I believe that there are 4563 ways.
The Australian One Dollar coin was first issued in 1984. The Australian Two Dollar coin was first issued in 1988.
1
The first Australian Two Hundred Dollar coins were issued in 1980.
No. There is no precious metal in any Australian general circulation coin. The Australian One and Two Dollar coins are made from an aluminium-bronze alloy.
All Australian Two Dollar coins are HH coins. HH is the initials of the designer of the reverse, Horst Hahne. The HH inscription only appeared on the 1988 and 1989 coins. There were 160,852,100 1988 coins minted. There were 31,637,800 1989 coins minted.
$40,000 Australian Dollars $40,000 Australian Dollars
No. There are no circulating Australian coins with any precious metal in them. The Australian One Dollar coin is made from 92% copper, 6% aluminum and 2% nickel which gives it a pale gold appearance.
They use the Australian Dollar in Australia. They have coins for 5, 10, 20, 50 cents and also 1 and 2 dollar coins. Then of course they have the bills like US dollars for 5, 20, 50 and 100 dollars.
5*20 cents (Australian) make a dollar. In US and Canadian coins, a 50 cent piece, a quarter, two dimes, and a nickel also make a dollar.
100 cents = 1 Australian dollar