Yes because bronze is made of copper so copper was around before bronze
Yes
the bronze age came after the stone age though in the near east copper age came before bronze age. Hope that helps! :)
Iron is harder to refine than copper.
Originally defined as a transitional period between the Neolithic Age and the Bronze Age, the Copper Age (or Chalcolithic Age, or Eneolithic Age) is now regarded to be part of the Bronze Age because it is characterized by the use of metals. It was during this time period that early metallurgists found that the addition of tin to copper produced the harder metal, bronze.
to make a bronze age sword you smelt copper and tin together. then pour it into a mould.
At the end of the Copper Age came the Bronze Age and this was then replaced by the Iron Age - so bronze was created at the beginning of the Bronze age when people discovered that if you mixed Tin and Copper you got a harder metal alloy called Bronze. This happened at about 2000 BC or four thousand years ago.
Copper was a significant resource in the Bronze Age as. along with tin, copper is a component of bronze.
the bronze age came after the stone age though in the near east copper age came before bronze age. Hope that helps! :)
because bronze was on earth first
Bronze is the mixture of tin and copper. Bronze is an alloy that is much harder than copper. Many things were made out of bronze in a time period known as the Bronze Age.
As an alloy with tin to create bronze.
Iron is harder to refine than copper.
Asia
Copper was used by humans from the Bronze Age.
The Copper Age period is transitional between the Neolithic and Bronze Age.
Yes, the Stone Age preceded the Bronze Age. The Stone Age is divided into different periods based on the development of tools and technologies, with the Bronze Age following as a period characterized by the use of bronze for tools and weapons.
When people mixed Tin and Copper together.
Originally defined as a transitional period between the Neolithic Age and the Bronze Age, the Copper Age (or Chalcolithic Age, or Eneolithic Age) is now regarded to be part of the Bronze Age because it is characterized by the use of metals. It was during this time period that early metallurgists found that the addition of tin to copper produced the harder metal, bronze.