Booklet Pane: Year of the Snake Prestige Booklet Pane (Christmas Island 2025)

Year of the Snake Prestige Booklet Pane (Christmas Island 2025)

07 January (Christmas Island ) within release Chinese New Year 2025 - Year of the Snake goes into circulation Booklet Pane Year of the Snake Prestige Booklet Pane face value 9 Australian dollar

Booklet Pane Year of the Snake Prestige Booklet Pane in catalogues
Stanley Gibbons: Sg: CX 1050d

Booklet Pane is horizontal format.

Also in the issue Chinese New Year 2025 - Year of the Snake:

Data entry completed
86%
Booklet Pane Year of the Snake Prestige Booklet Pane in digits
Country: Christmas Island
Date: 2025-01-07
Print: Offset lithography
Size: 155 x 103
Perforation: 14½ x 14
Emission: Commemorative
Format: Booklet Pane
Face Value: 9 Australian dollar

Booklet Pane Year of the Snake Prestige Booklet Pane it reflects the thematic directions:

Animals are multicellular, eukaryotic organisms of the kingdom Animalia (also called Metazoa). All animals are motile, meaning they can move spontaneously and independently, at some point in their lives. Their body plan eventually becomes fixed as they develop, although some undergo a process of metamorphosis later on in their lives. All animals are heterotrophs: they must ingest other organisms or their products for sustenance.

Chinese New Year or the Spring Festival (see also § Names) is a festival that celebrates the beginning of a new year on the traditional lunisolar Chinese calendar. Marking the end of winter and the beginning of spring, observances traditionally take place from Chinese New Year's Eve, the evening preceding the first day of the year, to the Lantern Festival, held on the 15th day of the year. The first day of Chinese New Year begins on the new moon that appears between 21 January and 20 February

The New Year is the time or day at which a new calendar year begins and the calendar's year count increments by one. Many cultures celebrate the event in some manner. In the Gregorian calendar, the most widely used calendar system today, New Year occurs on January 1 (New Year's Day, preceded by New Year's Eve). This was also the first day of the year in the original Julian calendar and the Roman calendar (after 153 BC)

Reptiles are tetrapod (four-limbed vertebrate) animals in the class Reptilia, comprising today's turtles, crocodilians, snakes, amphisbaenians, lizards, tuatara, and their extinct relatives. The study of these traditional reptile orders, historically combined with that of modern amphibians, is called herpetology. Because some reptiles are more closely related to birds than they are to other reptiles (e.g., crocodiles are more closely related to birds than they are to lizards), the traditional groups of "reptiles" listed above do not together constitute a monophyletic grouping (or clade). For this reason, many modern scientists prefer to consider the birds part of Reptilia as well, thereby making Reptilia a monophyletic class.

Snakes are elongated, limbless reptiles of the suborder Serpentes  Like all other squamates, snakes are ectothermic, amniote vertebrates covered in overlapping scales. Many species of snakes have skulls with several more joints than their lizard ancestors, enabling them to swallow prey much larger than their heads (cranial kinesis). To accommodate their narrow bodies, snakes' paired organs (such as kidneys) appear one in front of the other instead of side by side, and most have only one functional lung. Some species retain a pelvic girdle with a pair of vestigial claws on either side of the cloaca. Lizards have independently evolved elongate bodies without limbs or with greatly reduced limbs at least twenty-five times via convergent evolution, leading to many lineages of legless lizards. These resemble snakes, but several common groups of legless lizards have eyelids and external ears, which snakes lack, although this rule is not universal (see Amphisbaenia, Dibamidae, and Pygopodidae).

Booklet Pane, Year of the Snake Prestige Booklet Pane, Christmas Island,  , Animals (Fauna), Chinese New Year, Chinese Zodiac, New Year, Reptiles, Snakes