Get it to rust: Green rust: copper, red rust: iron, no rust: silver.Not exactlyUS cents don't rust (except for 1943 ones). "Copper" pennies are made of bronze which oxidizes to the familiar dark brown color. And US cents have NEVER been made from iron or silver. Plus letting a coin oxidize is a sure way to destroy any collector value it may have. The best way to tell is by the penny's date and/or weight.Cents up to 1857 were pure copperCents from 1858 to mid-1864 were made of copper-nickelCents from mid-1864 to mid-1982 (except for 1943) were made of bronze.Cents made in 1943 were struck in zinc-plated steel due to wartime shortages.Cents made since mid-1982 are zinc with a thin copper coating.
It's steel with zinc coating. Most have little collectible value because of rust and run from 5 to 25 cents.
No steel dimes were ever made but cents were struck in 1943 out of zinc coated steel and carry retail values of 5 to 50 cents (with no rust) for circulated coins.
The value of the 1943 steel cents mostly depends on the condition of the coins if they have been reprocessed are dark or have any rust values are 5 to 10 cents. Only coins with original surfaces have higher retail values.
The 1943 US cent was made of steel with a zinc coating to prevent rust and weighed 2.70 grams. The cent of today is composed of 99.2 % zinc and 0.8 copper with a plating of pure copper and weighs 2.5 grams.
All of the above.
it is also known as the manufacturing belt or the rust belt. it has the largest city and capital of the land. post industrial develpoement and globalization
The Manufacturing Belt was called the Rust Belt in the latter decades of the 20th century because the word that describes the deterioration of iron into rust was an appropriate name to give to a region where the iron and steel and related industries were in great decline. The South, West, and Southwest were called the Sun Belt because of their sunny climates; Rust Belt mimicked that name. In many cases, old factories had literally turned to rust, but the whole region was considered obsolete and deteriorated.
The Manufacturing Belt was called the Rust Belt in the latter decades of the 20th century because the word that describes the deterioration of iron into rust was an appropriate name to give to a region where the iron and steel and related industries were in great decline. The South, West, and Southwest were called the Sun Belt because of their sunny climates; Rust Belt mimicked that name. In many cases, old factories had literally turned to rust, but the whole region was considered obsolete and deteriorated.
yup
the migration of americans from the rust belt to the sunbelt
There are several states that are considered a part of the rust belt. These include Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, as well as Pennsylvania.
The Rust Belt is a term used to describe the post-industrial northeastern and middle western areas of the country that due to the fall of the manufacturing age sunk into urban decay. The barriers of the Rust Belt begin in central New York and continue through Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois and Wisconsin.
Unfortunately it is people's attitudes.
shikoku island
Rust belt, Sun belt, Middle East
Ohio