cast iron
The nuclear material used to make the bombs was from Oak Ridge TN
Bombs serve a purpose in war and even in peace time. Bombs can strategically (or as some say surgically) remove buildings, bridges, dams and other structures or enemy posts which makes it harder for the enemy to wage war. Bombs can be used in peace time to destroy old buildings, infected buildings, and make large craters in the ground when they are needed. They are also used as defensive weapons, not just as offensive weapons.
megan wrights big bombs
No bombs were actually used during the Cold War. That was why it was not a hot war.
There were different bombs for different things. The standard bomb had an outer casing made of steel, filled with an explosive similar to TNT. However, there were incendiary bombs, with an outer skin of thin sheet metal, and filled with a hot burning chemical mix intended to start fires. Other bombs were made to penetrate heavy concrete fortifications, a round bomb made to skip across water and destroy dams, and the atomic bombs used at Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Scrap; used to make tanks and ships, guns and shell, planes and bombs.
Steel and aluminium.
Metal was a war time commodity and not readily available. Often surplus war materials were used to make useful items. I would suspect that brass from shell casings would have been a common metal to use for ice buckets.
This element is phosphorous.
No ,casings are either a synthetic plastic or intestines of sheep and pigs.
plutonium and uranium
All of the combatant nations used bombs during WWII. Rifle/Machingun bullets chip concrete, dent metal, and tear up wood. Bombs destroy concrete, metal, and wood.
Gallium is a low mlting metal ("melts in your hand!" and forms alloys quite readily. It was used in early atom bombs alloyed with plutonium.
Steel casings are used.
It can.
to make a living
Brass is mostly used in plumbing and in water meters. Gun shells and engraving plates are considered brass.