Check the Royal Australian Mint site at the link below.
The Royal Australian Mint (RAM) uses a variety of "fonts" on Australian coins, but the information is confidential so as not to make it any easier for counterfeiters.
The Australian coins, the Australian anthem and the Australian notes.
The following information is from the Royal Australian Mint Annual Reports. In the 2007-2008 Financial Year, the Royal Australian Mint produced 196,685,000 Australian general circulation coins. In the 2008-2009 Financial Year, the Royal Australian Mint produced 167,600,000 Australian general circulation coins. The statistics for the 2009-2010 Financial Year are not yet available.
The original Australian decimal coins were designed by Stuart Devlin and mostly produced by the Royal Australian Mint Canberra.
I cannot find any reference to an Australian gold coin from any year with an eagle on it. Do you have any further information?
Australian coins have not changed since last year. General circulation coins are - 5, 10, 20 and 50 cents, and $1 and $2 coins.
There are many places online that one can buy Australian coins as well as many local stores that one can visit. One of the most popular places that one can buy Australian coins is the Australian website perthmint.
The reigning British monarch is on the obverse of all Australian coins. Currently, it is Queen Elizabeth II.
None. It is illegal to deliberately damage, deface or otherwise mutilate Australian coins.
There were 4,337,200 Australian 1997 50 cent coins minted.
All Australian coins feature the reigning Monarch on the obverse, currently Queen Elizabeth II since 1953. For the introduction of the Australian decimal currency in 1966, it was decided to have a uniquely Australian design for coins and most banknotes. See the links below to the Royal Australian Mint (RAM) and The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) for images of current Australian coins and banknotes.
No.