zinc is metal but not a medal.
The bronze Olympic medal is made of about 97% copper and 3% zinc, with no actual bronze content. The name "bronze" comes from the color of the medal, not its composition.
wo i had the same question and its a no
Copper Zinc and Tin The bronze medal is made up of 97 percent copper, 2.5 percent zinc and 0.5 percent tin and the gold medal is made up of 92.5 percent silver and 1.34 percent gold, with the remainder copper. The silver medal is made up of 92.5 percent silver, with the remainder copper.
Neither - gold is too expensive (thousands are produced each year) and lead is toxic. Most military medals are made of either bronze, zinc alloy, or pewter.
No. Gold medals only contain 1.34% gold (around 6 grams). 92.5% of a gold medal is actually silver while the rest is copper. The silver medal itself is also 92.5% silver, but it has no gold (obviously). Bronze medals are 97% copper, 2.5% zinc and 0.5% tin.
Bronze medals are typically made from a mixture of copper and other metals such as tin or zinc. This alloy gives the medal its distinctive bronze color and properties such as durability and weight.
Think zinc.Zinc is the way to think.
A place you go to drink zinc? No, it is an ingot of the metal zinc.
The raw material for zinc production is zinc sulfide ore, which is mined and processed to extract zinc metal.
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Zinc is the full name of the metal. Zinc is an transition element, proton number 30, Relative atomic mass about 65. However, there are loads of possible zinc compounds (zinc chemically tied to something else) such as Zinc chloride, zinc sulphate, zinc nitrate...
Zinc in Latin is "zincum."