Bronze: a copper-tin alloy, sometimes alloyed with phosphorous, aluminium, manganese, silicon, arsen or beryllium as minor constituents.
bronze is an alloy of the elemens copper and tin periodic table contains elements and not alloys.
I'm not sure if the question is:A) What elements does bronze contain? In other words, what is it made of?Or,B) What objects (***not elements, as bronze is not an element) contain bronze?The answer to A) is easy:Bronze is usually a mixture of copper and tin. Though sometimes the tin can be replaced with other elements such as phosphorus, manganese, aluminum, or silicon. Note that copper is always the base of any alloy called 'bronze'.
No, bronze is actually an alloy - a mixture of sorts, between the elements copper and tin.
There is no one type of bronze but it commonly contains copper and tin, with minor other constituents.
Many alloys contain two elements, for example Brass is copper + zinc, Bronze is copper + tin.
Potassium fluoride only contains the elements potassium and fluorine. Potassium is an alkali metal. Fluorine is a halogen, which is a type of nonmetal.
No, an element is a substance that contains only one type of molecule.
Iron and copper, steel and bronze are not elements.
There is no specific ratio for bronze because there are many different bronzes. For example, Aluminium bronze contains 92% copper, 8% aluminium. Phosphor bronze contains 89.75% copper, 10% in and 0.25% phosphorus. Manganese bronze contains 58.5% copper, 39.2% zinc, 1% Iron, 1% tin, 0.3% manganese.
The answer is all elements... hope i helped
Bronze figurines can have a huge price range, they can be as low as ǣ10.00 all the way up into the ǣ1000's. You have to take into account the sculpture, the type or bronze used and the size of the piece. All these elements will determine the price.
Yes, with a pickaxe. Mine Tin, then mine copper. After that use them in a furnece to get a bronze bar. -Happy Smithing