There is no deeply significant answer. All Australian banknotes are of a different colour to aid with visual distinction between denominations.
Five Dollar note is purple
Ten Dollar note is blue
Twenty Dollar note is red
Fifty Dollar note is gold
One Hundred Dollar note is green
There is no deeply significant answer. All Australian banknotes are of a different colour to aid with visual distinction between denominations. Five Dollar note is purple Ten Dollar note is blue Twenty Dollar note is red Fifty Dollar note is gold One Hundred Dollar note is green
The Australian Ten Dollar note is not pink and green. They are mostly blue but have swirls of yellow and green as well.
Australian One Hundred Dollar note commencing with Serial ZHH were printed in 1992.
On the Australian one hundred dollar note is Sir John Monash
Such a banknote does not exist. The Australian One Hundred Dollar note was first issued in 1984.
See the link below to the Reserve Bank of Australia for design features of the current Australian One Hundred Dollar note and all other current Australian banknotes.
The character on the holographic window of the Australian One Hundred Dollar note is a "Lyre Bird". These are part of the security devices included on all current Australian polymer banknotes.
Australia does not currently have, and is not likely to have a Two Hundred Dollar note anytime in the foreseeable future.
The old paper Australian One Hundred Dollar note was mostly grey with small flashes of blue, pink, purple and green. The new polymer Australian One Hundred Dollar note is mostly green. There is no mysteriously mythology behind the colouring of Australian banknotes. They are deliberately designed to be different colours to make distinguishing between the denominations easier.
Australia has never issued a Two Hundred Dollar note, and is very unlikely to do so for the foreseeable future.
The old Australian paper One Hundred Dollar note has the image of Sir Douglas Mawson on one side wearing his woollen balaclava. He was a famous Australian Antarctic explorer in the early 20th Century.
Dame Nellie Melba