People also search for. Detailed information about the coin 1 Dollar, Elizabeth II (4th Portrait, Kangaroo, Silver Bullion Coin), Australia, with pictures and collection and swap management: mintage, descriptions, metal, weight, size, value and other numismatic data. The mintage for the first-year Kangaroo Silver Dollar was set at a maximum mintage of 150,000 coins – and Australia's Silver Kangaroo hasn't looked back since. Over the last twenty-plus years, more than a million legal tender Kangaroo Silver Dollars have been pocketed by collectors all around the world.

The mintage of the Royal Australia Mint (RAM) Silver Kangaroo has always been a mystery as RAM does not release its Declared Mintage like Perth Mint does.

Fourth available coin in the 1 oz Platinum Australian Kangaroo Series! Mintage is unlimited in this series! Consists of One Troy ounce of.9995 fine platinum in BU condition. The face value of $100 (AUD) is fully backed by the Australian government. On the obverse is Queen Elizabeth II. The reverse features a kangaroo leaping across the design. Each coin offers a combination of Perth Mint's attention to detail and quality minting along with some of the lowest premiums available on a sovereign bullion coin. The Australian Kangaroo 1oz silver coin, first issued in the fall of 2015, comes in seal Mint tubes of 25 silver coins and is shipped in a 250 coin 'mini-box'. Each coin has a.


There are numbers put up by numismatics enthusiasts as well as dealers. However it is not known where the numbers came from. The numbers put up here are taken from Annual Reports of RAM starting from year 2001.Australian Kangaroo Silver Coin Mintage
Total mintage that includes carded, capsuled and cased coins

Australia Kangaroo Silver Coin Mintage

2001 - 45,562
2002 - 32,376
2003 - 35,230
2004 - 30,601
2005 - 26,146
2006 - 25,535
2007 - 4,000
2008 - 11,645Australian Kangaroo Silver Coin Mintage
2009 - 13,923
2010 - 9,266
2011 - 22,126
2012 - 19,853
Detailed breakdown of each type
Year 2001 Carded: 26,959; Capsuled: 10,850; Cased: 7,753
Remarks: 3,156 Carded were accounted in page 60 of 2001/02 Annual Report
Year 2002 Carded: 32,176; Cased: 200
Remarks: 3,040 Carded and 200 Cased were accounted in page 3 of 2002/03 Annual Report Supplement
Year 2003 Carded: 20,680; Capsuled: 2,550; Cased: 12,000
Remarks: 3,378 Carded, 2,050 Capsuled and 1,200 Cased were accounted in page 5 of 2003/04 Annual Report Supplement
Year 2004 Carded: 19,324; Cased: 11,277
Remarks: 1,863 Carded and 350 Cased were accounted in page 5 of 2004/05 Annual Report Supplement
Year 2005 Carded: 16,446; Cased: 9.700
Remarks: 1,690 Carded were accounted in page 87 of 2005/06 Annual Report
Year 2006 Carded: 17,983; Cased: 7.552Silver
Remarks: 308 Carded were accounted in page 85 of 2006/07 Annual Report
Year 2007 Carded: ? Cased: 4,000
Remarks: This is the most mysterious year as there was no carded coins accounted for Year 2007 but there are actually 2 different versions of 2007 carded coins being sold. Royal Australian Mint (RAM) had not wanted to continue on the kangaroos because of low demand. But dealers approached RAM to produce it. RAM's condition was that each dealer has to make a minimum of 500. Hence 4,000 specimen specimen frosted strike was produced in RAM issued velvet and satin lined case in a capsule without any COA.

Year 2008 Carded: 9,945; Capsuled: 1,700
Remarks: 5,402 Carded were accounted in page 85 of 2006/07 Annual Report, 4,543 Carded and 1,700 Capsuled were accounted in page 109 of 2007/08 Annual Report
Year 2009 Carded: 6,320; Capsuled: 7,603
Remarks: 300 Carded were accounted in page 114 of 2009/10 Annual Report
Year 2010 Carded: 8,050; Capsuled: 1,216
Year 2011 Carded: 10,803; Capsuled: 11,323 were accounted in page 107 of 2010/11 Annual Report
Year 2012 Carded: 8,849 Capsuled: 11,004 were accounted in page 108 of 2011/12 Annual Report

Australian Silver Kangaroo Coins

Australian Silver Kangaroos are a very desirable coin for collecting, thanks to their reliable purity and silver content (their usefulness as a bullion coin) as well as their beauty and collectible character. They have been designed purely with the collector in mind, with each year bearing different artwork, and issues consisting of a mix of frosted uncirculated coins and proofs. Some years have substituted gilding for frosting.

It is possible to buy Australian Silver Kangaroos directly from the Royal Australian Mint website. The shopping pages are similar to those on shopping sites like Amazon and millions of others – add items to your cart, then check out with a credit card. The website also lists Australian sources for these coins. Outside the continent, you will need to find a reputable dealer who carries Kangaroos.

Properties of the Australian Silver Kangaroo

The Australian Silver Kangaroo is, in keeping with international standards, a one troy ounce silver bullion coin – a measure which is likely to remain timeless even in the event of a complete triumph by the metric system (in metric terms, the Kangaroo weighs in at 31.1 grams). Its diameter is 1.5 inches (40 mm) like most of its argent kin across the world, and its thickness about 0.12 inches (2.85 mm). The edges of the coin are reeded, in the same manner as American quarters.

Kangaroo

The silver fineness of the Australian Silver Kangaroo is 99.9% pure silver, making it the equal of the vast majority of the world’s coins and inferior in purity only to Canadian Silver Maple Leaves. All Silver Kangaroos have a $1 Australian nominal face value, though they are obviously worth considerably more on both metallurgical and numismatic grounds. The coins have been in production from 1993 to the present day, with annual mintages ranging from 8,000 to nearly 73,000 uncirculated coins, plus additional proofs.

The obverse of all Australian Silver Kangaroos depicts the profile of Queen Elizabeth II, looking rather smug and facing to the right. The image has remained the same since 1993, and is an effigy by Raphael Maklouf. The coins all bear the inscriptions “Elizabeth II” and “Australia” with the year following it, wreathed about the edge, on the obverse.

The reverse of the Australian Silver Kangaroo is where the creativity of the mint officials and their artists comes to the fore. Each year shows a different image. Among the many depictions of kangaroos that have appeared over the years, there are half-stylized, half-realistic silhouettes of a jumping kangaroo (sometimes rendered as a tiny figure against a flat horizon and a setting sun), highly detailed and naturalistic images of one or more kangaroos, or sometimes wallabies, and the almost cubist creations of Aborigine artists. The legend “One Dollar” always appears on the coins, but there may also be “One ounce fine silver”, “1 ounce fine silver”, or “1 ounce of fine silver”, depending on year.

Australian Silver Kangaroos are released in two forms – uncirculated, with frosting, and proofs. The frosting is sometimes on the figure of the kangaroo, and sometimes on the background. A frosted background is referred to as “reverse frosting”, with the position of the frosting depending on what is deemed most aesthetically pleasing with each individual design.

Australian Gold Kangaroo Coin Mintage

History of the Australian Silver Kangaroo

The island continent of Australia has a highly distinctive set of wildlife dwelling in its varied habitats, from the sturdy, comical wombats to the high-leaping kangaroos. It is these latter beasts which are perhaps the best known living emblem of Australia. Standing upright much of the time on a pair of powerful hind legs adapted for leaping, raising their young, or “joeys”, in a marsupial pouch, and moving across the southern hemisphere grasslands and scrub with leaps of up to thirty feet (9 meters), kangaroos are a pleasant, unique part of the landscape which are well known around the world.

There are actually four species of kangaroos – and many more if the other varieties of “macropods” are counted, since there are somewhat more than four dozen types – but most people are familiar with the red kangaroo, the largest of their leaping clan. Australia has included the kangaroo in many symbolic depictions of their country, including its official armorial achievement.

Australia is a relative latecomer to the big business of minting and selling silver bullion coins to the eager collectors of the world, but the government of the southern nation eventually decided to cash in on this highly lucrative market as well. When this decision was reached, it was only natural that the kangaroo should be chosen as the image on the coin’s reverse, and that it should be named the Australian Silver Kangaroo.

In following the mintage practices of the other nations of the world which have issued their own government guaranteed bullion coinage, and placing a unique local animal or bit of plant life on the reverse, the Australians have made use of the example provided by the United States (bison, bald eagles) and Canada (maple leaves, grizzly bears, and timber wolves). This has proven to be a successful strategy thus far, and Australian Silver Kangaroos are considered to be highly collectible, beyond the price of one troy ounce of silver.

The first coins were struck in 1993. There was no particular reason for their striking beyond profit – that is, they were not minted to fund a specific project or government plan, but were simply created as a business decision in response to the success of other silver bullion coins and collectible coins, both domestic and foreign. The Royal Australian Mint was founded in the late 1960s, but served only practical minting purposes for decades following its first introduction.

The Australian Silver Kangaroo has been a highly successful program, part in thanks to the limited mintage of each year’s coins, and provides the Australian government with an income stream that will not be resented in a way that higher taxes in the same amount would. Therefore, it is likely that these coins will be produced into the foreseeable future, as long as the silver stock holds up and people continue their fascination with numismatics and bullion coins.