Many items contain silver:
- Jewelry
- Formal silverware, cups, serving dishes, etc.
- Older dental fillings
- Electronic items
- Older coins (e.g. US quarters, dimes, and half dollars dated 1964 or earlier, Canadian Coins of the same denominations dated 1967 and earlier, etc.)
Silver is generally just known as silver. Silver items that are sterling silver might be stamped with 925 (referring to the fineness of silver), Sterling or have a system of hallmarks that can be identified as silver. Keep in mind that things such as "nickel silver" or "German silver" are actually copper alloys and contain no silver at all!
A false silver.
The newer apple products contain silver.
Any household items contain chlorophyll.
Household items doesn't contain polonium.
Only the U.S. bullion Silver Eagle coins contain .999% silver.
No. Silver is an element. It does not contain anything else.
A Silver Smith crafts items out of silver, it can be items like spoons, knives, plates or decorative items like broaches and picture frames.
Flowing Hair, Draped Bust, and Gobrecht silver dollars contain .8924 oz. Pure silver. Trade dollars contain .7874 oz. pure silver Liberty Seated , Morgan and Peace dollars contain .77344 oz. pure silver. Eisenhower silver dollars contain .3161 oz pure silver . American Silver Eagles contain a full oz. pure silver
U.S. silver dollars dated 1935 or earlier contain 90% silver and 10% copper.
Scrap silver is silver jewelry, coins, utensils or other items with little collector value and is sold for simply the silver content in the items.
Not even close, Nickel "silver" has no silver and is a copper alloy. It simply looks slightly like silver. Items might be silver plated though. Nickel silver, also called German silver, is an alloy of approximately 60% copper, 20% nickel and 20% zinc; it doesn't contain any silver. The nickel gives it a shiny, silver appearance.