in tha back
They used coins and paper money.
The Song was the 1st Dynasty to develop paper money.
Ancient China used paper for scrolls and for books it has replaced papyrus that was used in Ancient Egypt and is still used in the United States.
Paper money was invented not discovered. Probably by the Chinese.
Assignats was the paper money from 1789 to 1796 and issued by the National Assembly
cotton fiber
Yes. Fecal matter contains fiber, and the fiber can be used to make paper.
Of course money is printed on paper! But not wood fiber paper. It is printed on cotton fiber paper. It is more durable than wood fiber and harder to counterfeit. There are also red and blue fibers embedded into the paper for anti-counterfeiting purposes. Ben Franklin invented the cotton/red blue fibered paper we still use to print our money on today.
I'm not really sure. But since lead is used in the process of making paper money to keep the printing from fading...I'd pass on trying to "digest" it. Paper is mainly made of cellulose fibers and human body can't digest cellulose fiber.
No, paper towels are made of paper, which is wood and plant fiber pulp. Cotton is a natural fiber. Both are mostly cellulose, but cotton is generally not used in paper towels.
Paper has cellulose fiber but human body can't digest cellulose fiber.
Long fiber type
No, although the components are similar. The "paper" used for US currency is made from a special fiber blend consisting of roughly 3/4 cotton and 1/4 linen.
As per the name suggest it made from more part from mechanical fiber and less part of chemical fiber.
Fish paper is made out of vulcanized fiber. Fish paper is used to wrap coils and is also used to insulate stove top parts.
100 percent virgin fiber.
By 1150, Moslems were using cannabis fiber in Europe's first paper production. This use of cannabis as a durable and renewable source of paper fiber continued for the next 750 years.