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100x1p coins make a pound..
The British One Pound coin is made from a nickel-brass alloy. No country could afford to make One Pound coins from gold. In most years, the Royal Mint, as do other Mints around the world, produces a range of collector coins. Some of these coins are made from precious metals including gold and silver, amongst others. These coins are not intended for general circulation and they are priced accordingly to reflect the values of the metals they are made from.
1 pound coin = 9.5g 1lb = 453.59g 453.59/9.5 = 47.78 coins, you'll need 48 coins to make the pound weight.
100
8
All are metals and used to make coins.
You can't use 4 coins to make 16 pounds 51 pence
put one in front of the other!
The British One Pound coin is 3.15mm thick, so 317 or 318 coins should make a metre high stack.
Alkali metals are group 1 metals such as lithium, sodium, potassium, rubidium, cesium and francium. Coinage metals are metals used in coin age to make coins. They are copper, gold and silver.
Gold, silver, and platinum have been called "precious metals" because they are metals and were used to make coins (money) in the days when money had to be made of something that was considered to be valuable in themselves. Thus, as coins they were valuable or precious
Mineral are not used to make coins. Metals are not minerals. Metals used for coinage include copper, nickel, silver, gold, zinc and platinum.