What makes any horse valuable is what somebody is willing to pay for it. In the 1980s Arabians were all the rage. People were paying incredible prices for these horses. Then the bottom fell out of the market. Horses that people had paid $200,000 were worth $2000. Many breeders were bankrupt and the result was far too many horses than the people to buy them.
The breed has recovered but has never reached the prices of years gone by.
A purebred Arabian is a very beautiful horse from the Arabian Peninsula. What makes the horse, or any other animal, a purebred is based on its lineage and the lineage of the animal its allowed to breed with.
it is important because it is their most valuable resources. without it they would be poor.
USA
it is important because it is their most valuable resources. without it they would be poor.
On the 1969 S penny a doubling of the print makes it very valuable ($35 000)
It's scarcity is the only thing that makes it valuable.
There's nothing special about it. Gold is more or less nonreactive, but that's not a special property. What makes it valuable is its rarity, not its nonreactivity. Mercury is similarly nonreactive, but not nearly as valuable.
IT HAVE pretty birds
Its maid of real copper
what makes it so valuable is because it purifies the intoxicated air. Also it produces lots of drinkable water and everyday needed products
The Arabian horse was bred to be a 'people' horse and was one of the few horses that was actually allowed to sleep inside the human tents in order to protect them from thieves and weather.
Gold is more valuable than silver. durr.