市值: $3.6793T -2.630%
體積(24小時): $210.1238B 27.900%
  • 市值: $3.6793T -2.630%
  • 體積(24小時): $210.1238B 27.900%
  • 恐懼與貪婪指數:
  • 市值: $3.6793T -2.630%
加密
主題
加密植物
資訊
加密術
影片
頭號新聞
加密
主題
加密植物
資訊
加密術
影片
bitcoin
bitcoin

$113653.179192 USD

-1.98%

ethereum
ethereum

$3525.217143 USD

-5.13%

xrp
xrp

$2.974588 USD

-1.43%

tether
tether

$0.999613 USD

-0.03%

bnb
bnb

$764.503086 USD

-3.02%

solana
solana

$164.558033 USD

-4.03%

usd-coin
usd-coin

$0.999804 USD

-0.02%

tron
tron

$0.326608 USD

-0.14%

dogecoin
dogecoin

$0.201896 USD

-3.61%

cardano
cardano

$0.722456 USD

-2.12%

hyperliquid
hyperliquid

$38.099997 USD

-7.92%

sui
sui

$3.494024 USD

-3.45%

stellar
stellar

$0.385959 USD

-3.14%

chainlink
chainlink

$16.209093 USD

-4.30%

bitcoin-cash
bitcoin-cash

$540.811075 USD

-4.11%

加密貨幣新聞文章

3 $1 Australian Coins That Could Be Hiding in Your Change

2025/05/06 17:00

3 $1 Australian Coins That Could Be Hiding in Your Change

Coin collecting is a fun and engaging hobby that can yield some interesting discoveries. In Australia, there are three particular $1 coins that coin collectors and experts are keeping an eye out for in 2023. These coins could be lurking in your change and might be worth far more than their face value.

According to experts at Coinxchange, these coins derive their value from minting errors, unique designs, and the quantity released into circulation.

2001 Centenary of Federation $1 Coin (Rotation Error) – Worth $50 to $100

One of the top coins to keep an priority is the 2001 Centenary of Federation $1 coin with a rotation error. These can be sold for about $50 to $100.

The quantity is 27.9 million coins for the year 2001. A small number of these coins have an error where the Queen’s head is not completely upright when the coin is flipped.

Doug Mcrostie, founder of Coinxchange, said the error was caused by a die issue during production, which led to misaligned prints.

“So they actually printed a whole bunch of different rotations, so it’s not a specific 90 degrees,” Mcrostie told Yahoo Finance.

“People frame it as a 1 o’clock rotation, or a 2 o’clock or 3 o’clock. So you can literally have it going all the way around.

“The most desirable ones are a direct 180 or a 90 degree. I’ve seen one collector have the full clock, so they had all 12 versions.”

But only a small number of these coins still in circulation have the rotation error. Mcrostie estimates that several thousand could still be in circulation.

2021 Mob of Roos $1 Coin – Worth $10 to $25

Another coin to watch out for is the 2021 Mob of Roos $1 coin.

This coin doesn’t have an error, but it’s valuable because so few were made. Only 106,000 of these standard issue coins were released, making it the lowest mintage $1 coin in active circulation.

It is also the lowest mintage coin released by the Royal Australian Mint since 1994. For reference, the 2020 Lunar Series III (Year of the Rat) $1 coin had a mintage of 250,000.

Coin collectors currently value this coin between $10 and $25.

2016 Changeover $1 Coin – Worth $20 to $50

The third rare coin is the 2016 Changeover $1 coin, which was minted to mark 50 years since Australia switched to decimal currency in 1966.

This coin features a special commemorative obverse design that pays tribute to the historic Australian Florin (minted from 1910 to 1963), while its reverse side displays the iconic Mob of Roos.

It is part of a six-coin commemorative series, which also includes coins in denominations of 5c, 10c, 50c, and $5. The $1 Changeover coin saw 560,000 units minted.

Coins in the series were designed by Bronwyn McMenamin and feature motifs from coins that circulated in Australia during the pre-decimal era (1910 to 1963).

This coin is valued between $20 and $50, depending on its condition.

原始來源:otenews

免責聲明:info@kdj.com

所提供的資訊並非交易建議。 kDJ.com對任何基於本文提供的資訊進行的投資不承擔任何責任。加密貨幣波動性較大,建議您充分研究後謹慎投資!

如果您認為本網站使用的內容侵犯了您的版權,請立即聯絡我們(info@kdj.com),我們將及時刪除。

2025年08月03日 其他文章發表於