There are only 2 Tin ores - Cassiterite and Stannite.
Examples are: iron, copper, zinc, tin, uranium, thorium, magnesium, manganese, lithium, etc.
Tin is easily dissolved by the common acids.
People do not make Indium. It is a soft, malleable, silvery-white metallic element found primarily in ores of zinc and tin.
Ores are finite, yes.
Assuming that both elements are in their most common isotopes, Tin IV oxide has 86 neutrons (Tin 70, Oxygen 8 x2)
Tin is a solid when mined. However the solid is not tin, but a tin ore (one or more tin compounds) and the tin will have to be separated. The most common compounds in tin ores are tin oxides and sulfides.
Uranium and zirconium ores
You cannot
Roger G. Taylor has written: 'Elvis in Art' 'Geology of tin deposits' -- subject(s): Tin ores
Calaverite , Sylanite ,Nagyagite , Petzite , Krennerite are some of the ores of gold but i don't know how about common ores of gold
some common ores are iron, copper, and gold magnetite, chromite, bauxite, ilmenite, pitchblende, carnotite, hematite, monazite, etc.
G. M. Davies has written: 'Tin ores' -- subject(s): Tin 'A French-English vocabulary in geology and physical geography'
mostly in Mountain or hilly areas. where Tatonic activity was valid some years ago.
Tin IS an element.
Two of the most common ores are Haematite and Magnetite, the most common being Hematite.Some others are Taconite, Goethite, Limonite and Siderite.
Examples are: iron, copper, zinc, tin, uranium, thorium, magnesium, manganese, lithium, etc.
Iron and tin can. But zinc is done by electrolysis as it is higher up the reactivity chain than either iron or tin- making it harder to extracted via reduction of CO to co2