Nickels are made of 75% copper and 25% nickel, that's all. :)
Brass is not a natural element and does not come from its own part of the world. It is made from Copper and Zinc. Copper can naturally be found in Lake Michigan and other places all over the world while Zinc can be found in Germany, where many say it had originated. A German scientist was the one to name Zinc.
Cupper, Aluminium, Iron, and all other metals.
The main alloys of copper are Brass (with zinc) and Bronze (with tin).
Zinc is similar to cadmium because on the Periodic Table of Elements, they are both categorized as Solid Metals.
US coins from 1965 to date are made of copper, nickel, zinc and manganese, depending on the denomination.
Silver is a fairly soft metal, and to make it more durable for (say) cutlery use, copper is alloyed with it to harden it. With 7.5% of copper, this is Sterling Silver.Silver also finds wide application in solders and brazes for joining metals, and many admixtures are used.
Most metals are not attracted to magnets at all. Some are, like: Iron, Steel Stainless, Steel, Brass, Zinc, Copper, Bronze, Aluminum, Silver, Gold, Mercury, Nickel, & Magnesium.
Nickel, copper, gold, zinc, and thats all I have.
Valuable metals.
Nickels are made of 75% copper and 25% nickel, that's all. :)
Most from 1794 to 1964 were all silver. 1965 to 1990 were clad copper. 1991 to today is a high-valued mix of silver and copper. pennys have allways been copper. - Jeremy
Copper, aluminum, zinc, tin, lead, gold, silver, and nickel are all familiar non-ferrous metals. The term non-ferrous simply means not iron. Any metal other than iron is non-ferrous.
Copper, Nickel, Zinc and Manganese. The Sacagawea coin and all the other presidential coins are made of the same things. The core is pure copper while the outer layers are made of all four metals. That's what gives them the gold color.
All alkali and alkali earth metals, all first row transition metals except manganese and iron. It forms amalgam as well with: Ag, Au, Sn, Ga, In, Al, Cd, Tl, Bi penis I don't know about the rest of metals
Zinc, gold, silver and many others. You see all metals can conduct electricity.
There is a lot of copper, there is zinc, a bit of gold, stainless steel, and the rest is plastics. That is about all that is in them.