Lion and Bear
The Kangaroo and the Emu are the two prominent animals on the Australian Coat of Arms. Two other animals featured within the Coat of Arms are the Black Swan and the Sheep.
Two deer.
This will depend upon which Royal Coat of Arms you are referring to. Some common animals include lions, eagles, dogs and horses.
The two animals on the Australian Coat of Arms are the Emu and the Kangaroo. They feature on the coat-of-arms because neither creature is believed to be able to take a backwards step. Therefore, they are symbols of forward progression and advancement - appropriate for the new, young country emerging at the beginning of the twentieth century.
One of the reasons is because it has two of the Australian animals.
The kangaroo and the emu are on Australia's coat-of-arms.
the coat of arms is two Laural leaves on an embalm
Surprising as it may seem, Australia does not actually have any "official" animals. The kangaroo and the emu are on Australia's coat-of-arms.
Queensland's Coat of Arms has a bull's head, a merino ram, a red deer (an introduced species) and the brolga (Queensland's official state bird).
Fiji's coat of arms includes a golden lion holding a cocoa pod and a dove with a branch of olive in its beak. The coat of arms also features sugar canes, cocoa-nut palms, a bunch of bananas, and two warriors.
Arms were registered so that no two people would have the same arms.
The Australian non-commemorative 50 cent coin is the only current coin that has the Australian Coat of Arms on the reverse. Prior to decimalisation, the Florin (Two Shillings) and the Sixpence had the Australian Coat of Arms on the reverse, and from 1910 to 1936 the Shilling and the Threepence had the Australian Coat of Arms on the reverse.