As of the start of play on July 21, 2007:
1. Rickey Henderson - 1406
2. Lou Brock - 938
3. Billy Hamilton - 912
4. Ty Cobb - 892
5. Tim Raines - 808
6. Vince Coleman - 752
7. Eddie Collins - 744
8. Arlie Latham - 739
9. Max Carey - 738
10. Honus Wagner - 722
As of the start of play on July 21, 2007:1. Rickey Henderson - 14062. Lou Brock - 9383. Billy Hamilton - 9124. Ty Cobb - 8925. Tim Raines - 8086. Vince Coleman - 7527. Eddie Collins - 7448. Arlie Latham - 7399. Max Carey - 73810. Honus Wagner - 722
It's probably in base ten because we use base ten for all our OTHER work in numbers as well. We learn to write numbers in base ten when in elementary school, and use base ten throughout our lives even if we aren't scientists or mathematicians or students or professionals who need to use scientific notation. So keeping scientific notation in base ten makes it easier for everyone to learn and read.
If a base of ten is to divide by ten that would be a decimal
A counting base of ten is a decimal base.
You can give coins in exchange for goods: not many shops will accept base ten blocks! Also, base ten blocks come in powers of ten, coins have all sorts of other values: 2, 20, 25, 50 - depending on the currency.
Base ten is the normal base used by everyone. With base ten, you can count from one to eternity without thinking much because base ten is commonly used. Note that additions and subtractions in base ten rounds of any summation that equals ten to 1 unlike in other bases that rely on the type of base. e.g 421 + 699 = 1120 in base ten
Ten. Nine from the base, and one where they all meet.
base ten model for 2485
it is adding up the numbers with base the base ten peices like its really easy.
Base ten math is referred to as 'Decimal'. Or sometimes 'Arabic'.
The Roman Numeral system is considered a base ten system.
Seventeen tens, in base ten, is 170