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Australian Gold Nugget

Australian gold bullion coin


Summary

Australian gold bullion coin

FieldValue
DenominationGold Nugget
CountryAustralia
UnitAustralian Dollar
EdgeMilled
Composition.9999 gold
Years of Minting1986–present
Obverse DesignHead of state of Australia
Obverse DesignerIan Rank-Broadley
Reverse DesignKangaroo (varies by year)

The Australian Gold Nugget, also sometimes known as the Australian Gold Kangaroo, is a gold bullion coin minted by the Perth Mint. The coins have been minted in denominations of oz, oz, oz, oz, 1 oz, 2 oz, 10 oz, and 1 kg of 24 carat gold.

They have legal tender status in Australia—though worth far more as bullion than their face value—and are one of few legal tender bullion gold coins to change their design every year, another being the Chinese Gold Panda. This may raise their numismatic value over the value of gold used, unlike many other bullion coins.

History

The Gold Nugget series was introduced in 1986 by Gold Corporation, a company wholly owned by the Government of Western Australia, more commonly known by its trading name The Perth Mint. This issue of coins had two unique features: a "two-tone" frosted design effect, and individual hard plastic encapsulation of each coin. These features were unusual for a standard bullion coin and gave the Nugget a unique market niche.

From 1986 to 1989, the reverse of these coins pictured various Australian gold nuggets. For example, the Welcome Stranger nugget was depicted on the 1987 1 oz Australian Nugget coin while the oz Australian Nugget coin of the same year showed the Hand of Faith nugget.

With the 1989 proof edition, the design was changed to feature different kangaroos, a more world-recognised symbol of Australia. The coins are today sometimes referred to as "gold kangaroos".

In 1991, 2 oz, 10 oz, and 1 kilogram sizes were introduced. These were created with the intention of using economies of scale to keep premiums low, and are some of the largest gold coins ever minted. In 1992, the face values on these large coins were lowered to keep them proportional to the 1 oz coin. The reverse of these coins does not change annually like the lower denominations; the same "red kangaroo" design is used every year.

In October 2011, the Perth Mint created a one tonne gold coin, breaking the record for the biggest and most valuable gold coin, previously held by the Royal Canadian Mint, the Big Maple Leaf. The coin is approximately 80 cm in diameter and 12 cm thick. It features a red kangaroo on the front of the coin and a portrait of Queen Elizabeth II on the reverse. The face value of the coin is 1 million, but at the time of minting it was valued at over 53 million.

The Australian Gold Nugget coins should not be mistaken for the Australian Lunar Gold Bullion coins. Both coins are minted by Perth Mint and have .9999 purity, but Lunar coins use images of different animals from the Chinese calendar instead of the kangaroo.

Specifications

TypeDiameterThicknessWeightFace valuetroy oz cointroy oz cointroy oz cointroy oz coin1 troy oz coin2 troy oz coin10 troy oz coin1 kilo coin1 tonne coin
14.10 mm1.40 mm0.05 ozt5
16.10 mm1.30 mm0.1 ozt15
20.10 mm1.80 mm0.25 ozt25
25.10 mm2.20 mm0.5 ozt50
32.10 mm2.65 mm1 ozt100
40.40 mm3.35 mm2 ozt500 (1991)
200 (1992–)
59.70 mm7.65 mm10 ozt2,500 (1991)
1,000 (1992–)
74.50 mm15.80 mm1 kg10,000 (1991)
3,000 (1992–)
approx 800 mmapprox 120 mm1012 kg1,000,000

References

References

  1. "1 oz Kangaroo Gold Coin 2025". StonexBullion.
  2. "About the Australian Gold Kangaroo / Nugget".
  3. (2023-02-04). "The Largest Gold Nuggets Ever Discovered {{!}} Silver Bullion".
  4. [https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-pacific-15477426 Australia unveils world's largest gold coin in Perth]
  5. (2011-10-27). "World's biggest gold coin worth $53m".
Wikipedia Source

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