That circle can be viewed almost any night -- it is the moon above us.
In circulated condition, that coin has no added value.
It's the Great Seal of the United States.
Trirant
A part of a circle is an arc.it's called an ARC.
"D" is the highest letter for all 1934-dated $10 bills regardless of whether they're silver certificates or Federal Reserve Notes. If the "J" is in a large circle to the left of Hamilton's portrait, please check the banner across the top of the bill - it's almost certain you have a Federal Reserve Note and not a silver certificate. There's more information at the questions > "What is the value of a 1934 US 10 dollar silver certificate?" > "What is the value of a 1934 US 10 dollar Federal Reserve Note?"
1976 is a common series for $2 bills, so they're generally only worth face value. If that B is to the left of Jefferson, inside a black circle, that's just the Federal Reserve Seal. B indicates New York.
A land mine with white markings or brozone circle is a training round.
is the circle closed for equal to
a circle with some negative and positive markings
Probably personal markings such as his initials...or Master Sergeant, however that would read MSG.
Yes
What OTHER markings are on the gun? sales@countrygunsmith.net
a circle and a rectangle
There are no -required- markings for a helicopter landing pad. Indeed helicopters are allowed to land anywhere on the airport they please (with permission from the tower if there is one) When helipads are marked, it usually takes the form of a large white circle with a large white H in the center, sometimes marked with white or red lights.
No. According to the FIFA Laws of the Game, all field markings must be clearly visible. The home team's logo can be present, but it must not obscure the required markings.
The circle is damage and adds nothing to the value of the coin. But it's still 50 cents.
The manufacturer markings are who made them. They are abbreviations of the full names for the company's full name. For example, Inland Division of General Motors would be Inland Div. The markings are on the barrel but it is way easier to find them behind the rear sight. I'm sure you know this, but the rear sight is behind the reciever, which it the sight shaped like a circle. if you want to know when it was made, post a new question with the manufacturer marking and the serial number which is located under the manufacturer marking.
There are several possible answers- difficult to answer without more inforation on the rifle. ONE answer would be a Japanese military Arisaka rifle, manufactured at Koishikawa Arsenal. They used an S in a circle for barrel proof markings- but other nations did as well.