<Li> Embossing is inside the shiny, transparent window . </Li> <P> On 13 February 2015 the Reserve Bank of Australia announced that the next series of Australia notes would have a tactile feature to help the visually impaired community to tell the value of the note after a successful campaign led by 15 - year - old Connor McLeod, who is blind, to introduce the new feature . The $5 banknote includes the tactile feature and was issued on 1 September 2016, to coincide with Australia's National Wattle Day . Philip Lowe, the governor of the Reserve Bank, has said that the other fourth series banknotes will be released separately, anticipating that the $10 note was released on 20th September 2017, followed by the $50 note in 2018, with remaining denominations released in subsequent years . The Reserve Bank has no plans to release fourth series banknotes in denominations higher than $100 . </P> <Table> Fourth series (2016--present) <Tr> <Th> Note </Th> <Th> Obverse design </Th> <Th> Reverse design </Th> <Th> Dimensions (mm) </Th> <Th> Weight (g) </Th> <Th> Main colour </Th> <Th> Window image </Th> <Th> Embossing </Th> <Th> Printed </Th> <Th> Issued </Th> </Tr> <Tr> <Td> $5 Next Generation Banknote </Td> <Td> Queen Elizabeth II </Td> <Td> Parliament House </Td> <Td> 130 × 65 × unknown </Td> <Td> unknown </Td> <Td> Violet, pink </Td> <Td> Top to Bottom window </Td> <Td> Federation star </Td> <Td> Currently printing </Td> <Td> 1 September 2016 </Td> </Tr> <Tr> <Td> $10 Next Generation Banknote </Td> <Td> Banjo Paterson </Td> <Td> Dame Mary Gilmore </Td> <Td> 137 × 65 × unknown </Td> <Td> unknown </Td> <Td> Blue </Td> <Td> Top to bottom window </Td> <Td> Pen nib </Td> <Td> Currently printing </Td> <Td> 20 September 2017 </Td> </Tr> <Tr> <Td> $50 Next Generation Banknote </Td> <Td> David Unaipon </Td> <Td> Edith Cowan </Td> <Td> 151 × 65 × unknown </Td> <Td> unknown </Td> <Td> Yellow </Td> <Td> Top to bottom window </Td> <Td> Book </Td> <Td> late 2018 </Td> <Td> late 2018 </Td> </Tr> <Tr> <Td_colspan="12"> These images are to scale at 0.7 pixels per millimetre . For table standards, see the banknote specification table . </Td> </Tr> <Tr> <Td_colspan="12"> <Dl> <Dt> Remarks </Dt> </Dl> <Ol> <Li> Thickness and weight of notes is + / - 5 percent per 1000 notes </Li> <Li> The Next Generation security banknote from the Reserve Bank of Australia </Li> <Li> A new clear polymer window that goes from the top to the bottom of the banknote that is all clear </Li> <Li> Embossing is inside the small window . </Li> <Li> There are two blocks of micro-text on the reverse side of the Fourth series five dollar note, which contains excerpts of the Constitution of Australia </Li> </Ol> </Td> </Tr> </Table> <Tr> <Th> Note </Th> <Th> Obverse design </Th> <Th> Reverse design </Th> <Th> Dimensions (mm) </Th> <Th> Weight (g) </Th> <Th> Main colour </Th> <Th> Window image </Th> <Th> Embossing </Th> <Th> Printed </Th> <Th> Issued </Th> </Tr>

Who is on the australian 1000 dollar note