The Australian paper One Hundred Dollar note (grey) was first issued in 1984 and last issued in 1991.
For any estimate of value, the serial number and signatories would need to be known.
The largest general circulation currency ever produced by the Royal Australian Mint, or the Reserve Bank of Australia, was the One Thousand Pound note issued in 1914 and 1924. In more recent times, the Royal Australian Mint has produced Non-Cirulating Legal Tender (NCLT) coins up to the value of $10,000 AUD. The Million Dollar note is an advertising ploy used by some companies to attract attention to their product, with some success, it appears.
Australia uses a decimal currency (100 cents = 1 Dollar). The dollar symbol is $. Note, one vertical bar, not two.
Queen Elizabeth II has been shown wearing a crown of one type or another on all Australian decimal coins. The old paper One Dollar note showed her with no headwear at all. All pre-decimal coins show her with a laurel around her head.
The first Australian One Dollar note along with the Two, Ten and Twenty Dollar notes, were issued on the 14th of February, 1966, at Australia's conversion to decimal currency. The first Australian One Dollar coin was issued in 1984.
You do not specify a country. The first Australian One Hundred Dollar note was issued well after Australia's changeover to decimal currency in 1984. The first New Zealand One Hundred Dollar note was issued at New Zealands changeover to decimal currency in 1967.
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.
Australia does not have a "percent" note. Current circulating Australian banknotes are the Five, Ten, Twenty, Fifty and One Hundred Dollar notes.
Value of 1963 one dollar star note
Beginning in 1992 with Five Dollar note, and completing the transition in 1996 with the One Hundred Dollar note, all Australian banknotes have been made from a polymer compound jointly developed by the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) and the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO).
All Australian bank notes had "COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA" on them until 1972. Following a change of government in November 1972, the words "COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA" were replaced with "AUSTRALIA".
Decimal currency was introduced in Australia on the 14th of February, 1966. The One Dollar note was predominantly brown and orange in colour, had Queen Elizabeth II and the Australian Coat of Arms on the front, and Aboriginal artwork on the back. All paper money introduced a metallic strip imbedded in the paper to make counterfeiting more difficult. It was a similar size and colour to the 10 Shilling note, which it replaced. There were only two major variants of the One Dollar note - Notes printed from 1966-1972 will have "COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA" printed at the top, front and back. Notes printed from 1972-1982 will have only "AUSTRALIA" printed at the top, front and back. The Australian One Dollar note was replaced with a coin, first issued in 1984 to replace its paper predecessor.
One note is not a five dollar note but the other is.
There isn't a note with the value of one million dollar.