This coin does not exist. The platypus is on the 20c coin, and is worth 20 cents. The 5c coin has an echidna on it, and is worth five Australian cents.
no Queen Elizabeth has not died yet. I think she is still ruling
Yes. Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II is the Queen of Canada.
You are asking about a 20 cent coin from Australia (KM#403). It weighs 11.3 grams, measures 26.87mm in diameter, and is made of copper-nickel. The front bears an image of Queen Elizabeth II, wearing a tiara and facing right, with "ELIZABETH II" to the left and "AUSTRALIA 1999" to the right. The has an image of a duckbilled platypus swimming in the water, with a large "20" in the upper right quadrant. The edges of the coin are reeded. 64,181,000 such coins were made for circulation in 1999; in Brilliant Uncirculated, an example is worth about US$0.80. Otherwise, the exchange value of the Australian dollar (as of May 10, 2011) means its face value is about 21 US cents. An additional 28,000 coins were produced in Proof for collectors - these are worth about US$10.00 each (according to the Standard Catalog of World Coins).
She is Elizabeth the second, as the only other female sovereign called Elizabeth, was Queen Elizabeth the first, back in the 16th century.
Elizabeth Macarthur came by ship to Australai. She was on one of the ships in the 2nd fleet.She came with her husband to help along with the affairs of her husband, John Elizabeth Macarthur came to Australia in 1789 as part of the second fleet, she was not on the first fleet. She did arrive with her husband and they estabished a farm at Parramatta.
Rhodesia Elizabeth the second 25c 1964
Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon.
Yes, In the movie "Phineas and Ferb: Across the Second Dimension" But his identity will unfourtanetly be forgotten again in the end of the movie. See the Movie in Disney Channel, August 5th, 2011!
Australia is simply "Australia", or the Commonwealth of Australia.
second second
They aren't number one at the moment. Australia is number one; New Zealand is second and England is third
About 400 years earlier there was a Queen Elizabeth