Front: Mary Reibey
Back: Reverend John Flynn
banjo Paterson and Mary Gilmore
With the exception of the 1988 Bicentennial note, the Australian $10 note is mostly blue.
100 divided by 10 = 10. 10 Australian Ten Dollar notes equal one Australian One Hundred Dollar note.
This is the most common Australian $2 note, circulated examples are only worth their face value, if in Uncirculated condition they retail for up to $10 each.
Alexander Hamilton, first US Secretary of the Treasury, is on the ten dollar bill.
An Australian Ten Dollar note serial number MNF187556 with Fraser/Cole signatories would have been issued in 1991. It was the last year i which paper $10 notes were issued.
There were no Australian 10 Shilling notes printed in 1966. 1966 is the year they were withdrawn after being replaced by the One Dollar note.
Yes there is. It is a commonwealth games 1982 australian 10 dollar coin issued by the royal australian mint
Animals do not feature on current Australian banknotes. The only animals appearing on current Australian banknotes are some horses on the Ten and One Hundred Dollar notes, and a camel on the Twenty Dollar note. There is also a stylised Lyrebrid on the hologram of the One Hundred Dollar note.
An Australian 1982 One Dollar note (Johnston/Stone - serial DPP, uncirculated and in absolute mint condition could fetch up to $10 AUD. If it has circulated but still in good condition, it might fetch anything from $1 to $3 AUD. The Australian One Dollar note is no longer in circulation. A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation.
Since 1993, all Australian Ten Dollar banknotes have been made from a polymer (plastic) compound. Any collector value would depend on the condition of the note, the serial number, the signatories and any unusual features of the note. Apart from that, they are worth 10 Dollars in Australia.
OBV: Portrait of AB 'Banjo' PatersonBased on a photograph of him taken at the time of his return to the Boer War in 1900. The photograph is held by the Paterson Estate.REV: Portrait of Dame Mary GilmoreBased on a photograph of Gilmore taken in her early twenties. This photograph has appeared in the Australian encyclopaedia and is held by the National Library of Australia.
For a valuation on Australian banknotes, you would need to provide the serial number and the signatories on the note, the condition and any peculiarities.