There is no documented evidence that anybody has found an Australian Five Dollar note without the signatures.
Assuming that your Five Dollar note is a legitimate Australian Legal Tender banknote and it also includes the Legal Tender declaration and a serial number, it would be very rare. Any such banknote should not have got past the quality control at Note Printing Australia.
Your question is a little confused. Australian banknotes are not dated. They all have the signatures of the Governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia and the Secretary to the Treasury. Possibly Coombs and Wilson. These two names will help to pinpoint the date of the banknote. All Australian banknotes have a serial number. The serial numbers of banknotes from this period will have two alpha characters above two numeric characters (written like a fraction) followed by six numeric characters. The star at the top is part of the Australian Coat of Arms.
No.
Such a banknote does not exist. The Australian One Hundred Dollar note was first issued in 1984.
All Australian banknotes will have "AUSTRALIA" printed on them in large, difficult to miss letters. All Australian banknotes have the signatures of the "Governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia" and the "Secretary to the Treasury". All Australian banknotes have a serial number on them in at least one place. All Australian banknotes have "This Australian note is legal tender throughout Australia and its territories", or something similar printed on them. All Australian banknotes have the denomination printed in letters and printed in numerals. All current Australian banknotes are made from a polymer compound and feature various security devices such as holograms and micro printing to make life more difficult for counterfeiters. See the related link below to the Reserve Bank of Australia for more detail on Australian banknotes.
Australian banknotes have never had a date or year printed anywhere on them.To determine the year of printing, you need to identify the two signatures of the "Governor of the Reserve Bank" and the "Seceretary to the Treasury". These two signatures will pin the banknote down to two years at best.A combination of the two signatures and the Serial Number will identify the banknotes' year of printing.From 1993 a coded system of dating on the new polymer notes was commenced. The first two numerals of the serial number contain the last two digits of the year, for example, AA 93123456, indicate that the note was issued in 1993.
I think not, whoever she is.
Enid Lyons has never appeared on an Australian banknote.
The Australian Fifty and One Hundred Pound notes were withdrawn from circulation in 1945.
No. Captain Cook has yet to make an appearance on any Australian banknote.
You could take it to a reputable coin dealer or advertise it on eBay.
Current issue:$1, $2, $5, $10, $20, $50, $100No longer made:$500, $1000, $5,000, $10,000; also $100,000 but used only for internal government transactions.
There has only been one Australian banknote that had the same faces on it for over 20 years and featured a "her". The original paper Australian Five Dollar note released between 1967 and 1991, had Sir Joseph Banks (Botanist) on the front, and Caroline Chisholm (Philanthropist) on the back.