The small writing in front of the man's head says -
"Governor Reserve Bank of Australia" and "Secretary To The Treasury" each title has the signature of the individual above it.
It goes on to say -
"This Australian note is legal tender throughout Australia and it's territories."
All Australian notes have the same writing. The names of the Governor and the Secretary change periodically.
It also has Banjo Paterson's poem "The Man from Snowy River" in microprint in the left hand side of the box containing the image of Banjo Paterson. The words TEN DOLLARS are microprinted between each line of the poem.
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 uses the Australian dollar. The dollar comes in small coins made up of 92% copper, 6% aluminium and 2% nickel. It is 25 mm in diameter and weighs 9 grams.
Modern small dollars have the dates inscribed on the edge of the coin, rather than the front or back. They're worth one dollar each.
It's just a common Sacagawea dollar, spend it.
From a currency perspective, the Australian One Dollar was withdrawn from circulation in 1984, so it really does not matter if they are fakes, also the One Dollar note is too small a denomination to go to the trouble of counterfeiting. From a collectors perspective, all Australian paper banknotes were made from a specially manufactured and prepared paper with a smooth texture. All Australian banknotes had intricate watermarks and metallic strips running through them. The colours are uniform and not blotchy, the coloured parts of the notes end in a straight line at either side of the note. Apart from "Star" replacement notes and first and last prefix notes, most Australian One Dollar notes do not have sufficient collector value to warrant counterfeiting.
Continued: I heard that if there is a M on the front of the coin it is a morgan which there is no M then i heard it would be considered a peace silver dollar but when i looked at the picture of a piece silver dollar the pictures were different.
you use the code <small> before the text and you just keep writing that over so like if you want really small writing it would be like <small><small><small><small><small> and you can you <big> as well and <i> for italic and you end the code by writing </i>
Simply place <.small.> before your writing. Minus the periods of course. And after you finish writing what you want small, add in </small.> (Also minus the periods.)
My Dollar General does carry small cans, not the ones that come with the hose, just the can. They are kept behind the front counter at my local store. If you don't see them on the shelf, ask a cashier.
It's to small
There is no documented evidence of any Australian One Dollar note with a "small white dot" printing defect on the reverse. Genuinely flawed banknotes are not necessarily known about or documented until somebody turns up with one, since they are an "accident" of the printing process, and have escaped detection during quality control at the printers therefore, a valuation cannot be anticipated. I suggest that you take your One Dollar note to a reputable coin dealer for an opinion.
He 'small fronts' all the ladies in the front row