US money is not printed on paper. The paper in U.S. banknotes is made of a 75% cotton and 25% linen mixture.
Read more: How_many_trees_are_cut_down_annually_to_produce_US_dollar_bills
None. US money is not printed on paper. The paper in U.S. banknotes is made of a 75% cotton and 25% linen mixture.
about 2 dollar bills
there are roughly 1000 trees being cut down in britain, every 3 hours or so.
Federally-issued $1000 banknotes were printed from 1862 to 1945, although all bills from 1934 to 1945 carried the same 1934 series date. Printing was suspended due to low demand; at that time $1000 could purchase a reasonably well-equipped sedan or be a down-payment on a house. It was still possible to request them from a bank up till 1969. That year President Nixon suspended distribution of all bills larger than $100 in an effort to reduce money-laundering and other criminal activities. Large bills were never formally withdrawn and are technically still legal to spend, but they're worth more to collectors.
$1. A dollar bill will always be worth $1. it may go down and you need to use a few $1 bills to equal one dollar, but it will always equal one dollar.
Two hard to break down into other denominations, tellers shouldn't handle that much cash
It is about the same as normal paper. Just follow the instructions in the related link (Scroll down on this page.)
1000 dollars a month is a good price or you could bring your kneepads
by cuting trees down Cuting down and using the cut down trees for paper,fire wood
nobody cut the trees down they just dug for from underground because if they did cut the trees down there would be no more kauri trees left in the world
Dollar Down was created in 1925-09.
deforestation is a name for cutting down trees.