None. There is no gold in any Australian general circulation coin.
No - the Australian dollar is a fiat currency.
Depends on the price of gold.
Australia uses the Australian Dollar.
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.
Depends on the price of gold.
The Australian Two Dollar coin is made from copper, aluminium and nickel and is of a gold appearance. Very occasionally, some Proof coins are made from silver and issued in sets. The 2000 $2 coin was not one of these. If you have a silver $2 coin, it has been plated. Modified coins are worthless as a collectible.
It's not gold, it's brass and is just a dollar.
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.
2009 50 dollar gold piece 1oz worth money value
If you refer to the Australian One and Two Dollar general circulation coins, there is no gold in them, they are made from 92% copper, 6% aluminium, 2% nickel giving them a gold appearance. There are no precious metals in any Australian general circulation coins. Australian non-circulating gold coins which are released annually for investors and collectors, contain 99.99% gold.
in June 2009 it is worth about $1000.
Assuming that your coin is in mint condition and still in the original packaging, and depending on the year, theme and gold content, your Australian Two Hundred Dollar gold coin might get anything from $420 to $750 AUD.