Great question. Even better if you could fingure this out with some certainly and buy some to sell in 100 years. Okay 50 years. Okay 5 years. What makes a comoodity valuable is two connected properties: 1) Scarcity 2) Market (that is there are lots of people willing to pay for it). The problem is that scarcity encourages its own replacements to be created. If oil becomes scarce....we'll all drive electric cars and then a barrel of oil becomes less valuable. So I don't have the answer. But I hope this help you think about it.
(price of commodity in the given year/ price of the commodity in preceding year) * 100
Divide the price of the commodity in the given year by the price of the commodity the year before. Then, multiply that number by 100.
Honus Wagner, 100 years ago. Only a couple hundred of his cards were printed in the American Tobacco Company's set of cards before he threatened to sue if they included him.
It is valuable like in about max $100 from the most obsessed dodger fan
Thriller, released in 1982, over 100 million sold worldwide
The most valuable silver certificate has to be the 1880 $100 note. Even a well-worn example is worth over $4,000 -- and a nice crisp uncirculated one could easily be worth over $100,000
what is the most important invention in the last 100 years?they r life savers :D
100 years.100 years.100 years.100 years.100 years.100 years.100 years.100 years.100 years.100 years.100 years.
100 years.100 years.100 years.100 years.100 years.100 years.
if you are observing a star 100 light years away, you are looking at it as it was 100 years ago.
For most geological processes, 100 years is a very short time, so to answer your question, no.
The most valuable stamp is the inverted Jenny. It was auctioned for over 3 million. There are only about 100 pieces in existence today.