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The Australian one-cent coin is the smallest denomination of the Australian dollar. It was introduced with the Currency Act 1965 (Commonwealth) but - unlike some of the other denominations - it did not replace an earlier pre-decimal coin; given that the 5 cents piece replaced the sixpence, one cent was technically equal to 1.2 pence but the Act rounded that to one penny. The one cent coin was much smaller than the penny though, so the penny denomination did not continue to circulate (unlike the sixpence, shilling and florin which were equivalent to respectively 5 cents, 10 cents and 20 cents and were re-denominated as such). Coins issued in 1984 circulated for eight years before, together with coins of the two cent denomination, they were withdrawn from circulation in February 1992. They have never been demonetised though and remain legal tender. | ||||||
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Variety | In mint sets | |
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Mintage | Issued: unknown | |
Variety | Proof FDC | |
Mintage | Issued: 61,000 (included in total) |
Source | Edition | About | Link | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Royal Australian Mint | 2016 | Mint | link | |
Royal Australian Mint | 2016 | Mintage | link | |
Krause, Standard Catalog of World Coins | Mintage | Circulation and proof mintage | ||
McDonald, Australian Coins and Banknotes | Varieties | Proof |
The Definitive Guide to Australian Silver Coins |
Country | Australia |
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Currency | Australian Dollar |
Coin Type | One Cent |
Issued | 1984 |
Monarch | Queen Elizabeth II |
Effigy | Queen Elizabeth II - Second Portrait, by Arnold Machin |
Face Value | 1 (x Cent) |
Total Mintage | 74,796,000 (74.8 million) |
Current | No |
Material | Bronze |
Designer | Stuart Devlin |
Technology | Milled (machine-made) |
Shape | Round |
Size | 17.5300 mm |
Mass | 2.5900 g |
OCC ID | JWMR-AOQP-CXXJ-EYPL |
Buy gold and silver bullion online! |
Source | Reference ID |
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Krause, Standard Catalog of World Coins | Australia KM# 62 |