No.
Such a banknote does not exist. The Australian One Hundred Dollar note was first issued in 1984.
At current there is no One Million Dollar Austrialian Dollar. Australian dollar currency comes in one, two, five, 10, 20, 50, and 100 dollar varieties.
There are no Australian One Million Dollar banknotes. There are no collectible Australian banknotes that would get anything near One Million Dollars.
The Australian One Hundred Dollar note is not rare at all. Since it is our highest denomination banknote, other than payday, most people do not have a pocket full of them.
Edmund Barton has not appeared on any Australian banknote to date. The only politician to have ever graced an Australian banknote was Sir Henry Parkes on the 2001 Centenary of Federation Five Dollar note, he being one of the major motivational forces leading to the Federation of Australia.
Edmund Barton has not appeared on any Australian banknote to date. The only politician to have ever graced an Australian banknote was Sir Henry Parkes on the 2001 Centenary of Federation Five Dollar note, he being one of the major motivational forces leading to the Federation of Australia.
It is the five-dollar Australian bank note, which features Queen Elizabeth II and the Parliament House. This is one person and one building, not two people.
The current Australian Five Dollar note features Queen Elizabeth II on the front and a view of the new and old Parliament Houses on the reverse.
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.
The Royal Australian Mint advises that from 1984 to 2009, approximately 754.246 million Australian One Dollar coins have been minted for general circulation.
The Australian Fifty and One Hundred Pound notes were withdrawn from circulation in 1945.
Australian one-dollar coin was created in 1984.