Plated is the most likely if it is silver. the US has never made a circulating one cent coin out of silver in any year.
I would hire someone to do it. But you should be able to as long as you clean the bronze allowing the silver to coat the bronze.
No, they were made of 90% silver and 10% copper. Someone can bronze plate them though.
Gold. Then silver then bronze.
10 silver and bronze
no, only silver and bronze
Gold: golden silver: silver bronze: bronze
1. USA - 13 gold, 1 silver, 2 bronze 2. USSR - 2 gold, 4 silver, 3 bronze 3. Yugoslavia - 1 gold, 4 silver, 1 bronze 4. Argentina - 1 gold, 0 silver, 1 bronze 5. France - 0 gold, 2 silver, 0 bronze 5. Italy - 0 gold, 2 silver, 0 bronze 5. Spain - 0 gold, 2 silver, 0 bronze 6. Canada - 0 gold, 1 silver, 0 bronze 6. Croatia - 0 gold, 1 silver, 0 bronze 7. Brazil - 0 gold, 0 silver, 3 bronze 7. Lithuania - 0 gold, 0 silver, 3 bronze 8. Uruguay - 0 gold, 0 silver, 2 bronze 9. Cuba - 0 gold, 0 silver, 1 bronze 9. Mexico - 0 gold, 0 silver, 1 bronze
Medal of Honor is the highest combat heroism award possible, Silver Star is the Third, and Bronze Star is the fourth. Second is Distinguished Service Cross.
Michelle Kwan (1998 Silver, 2002 Bronze)
Silver: 7 Bronze: 5
There is no US silver penny dated 2001. Instead, what has happened is someone has stripped off the copper layer of the coin and left the zinc layer which looks silver-ish.
one is silver and one is bronze The Silver Star Medal is a higher award for bravery than the Bronze Star Medal. The Bronze Star Medal was issued to any Infantryman who fought in combat. The Silver Star Medal is silver and has a ribbon that is prodominately blue. The Bronze Star Medal is identical in size and design except it is bronze and has a ribbon that is mainly red.