Most manufacturing companies choose their preferred suppliers by means of surveying different suppliers and looking for ISO certification - since it ensures them that these suppliers follow the standards of safety that the ISO sets for suppliers and businesses. Although not a necessity for most suppliers and even companies / businesses, it is one of the most common factors that contribute to a suppliers credibility to manufacturers and businesses.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. Gold certificates had gold seals, green seals were used on Federal Reserve Notes.
I assume you are referring to embossers ("raised seals") as opposed to stamps. Embossed impressions are traditionally upside down/backwards because the seal press is meant to impress the seal from the left of the page or from the bottom of the page. Since most of the time the notary's signature is placed on the right side of the page, and many notaries place the seal on top of their signature, they must angle the seal press in such a way that the impression is upside down. Since the seal is round it doesn't make any *legal* difference which was it is impressed. There *are* seals that impress from the right side of the page, and they can be made that way upon request. However, most notary seals impress from the left or the bottom, so notaries must affix them backwards in order to place them on top of their signature.
A 1929 5 dollar bill from Chase is pretty common and probably worth between $5 and $8. However the seal should be brown rather than red. Red seals were used on United States Notes, while 1929 $5 bills were issued as National Currency Notes.
Please check your bill again. The banner across its top and the green seal indicate it's a Federal Reserve Note. Any bills printed in the 21st century are far too new and too common to be worth any more than face value. The last $10 silver certificates had blue seals and were printed in the 1953 series.
Various sources give seals a range of collective names: bob of seals colony of seals crash of seals flock of seals harem of seals herd of seals plump of seals pod of seals rookery of seals spring of seals team of seals most common: herd, pod, colony, or rookery less common: bob or harem
The Weddell seal and the Leopard seal are common, although the list also includes Antarctic Fur seals, Crabeater seals and Ross Seals. These are the most common seals on earth. Because there are no land predators, their numbers are large.
Yes, seals are predators of penguins and will hunt them for food. Penguins are a common prey for certain seal species, such as leopard seals and Antarctic fur seals.
leopard seals are most common
Common seal food. It comes in cans at the grocery store.
yes they do in facts share a common ancestor.
Weddell seals and Leopard seals are both common in Antarctic waters.
seals
An "official seal" of what? There are companies that specialize in this type of product, corporate seals, notary public seals, etc. Try the Yellow Pages or an internet search.
Steel seals can be purchased from various companies that specialize in packaging, such as MacFarlanePackaging or SteelSeal. They can also be purchased from online mega-retailers such as Amazon or eBay.
Common Seal and Grey Seal.
They both are suited for cold weather.