I do without it now.
Life would be different without silver as it is widely used in many industries, such as electronics, medicine, and photography. Without silver, the production of certain products may be affected or more expensive. Additionally, silver has historical and cultural significance, so its absence would impact certain traditions and practices.
No, it would cause it to turn because of the acid in the pineapple.
If it has .999 Fine silver on it, it's a privately made "silver round" not a coin. The value would be for the silver by weight.
The reason silver coins minted for circulation weren't pure silver is because without an added metal, usually copper, the coin would be too soft and would wear out quickly.
yes silver is flexible or we would not have silver bands andnecklace's
Not a meaningful question. Gold coins were made from gold and copper without any silver in them. Silver coins were made from silver and copper without any gold.
.925 generally marks the silver content in a silver ring, and it heavily regulated in Mexican silver. I would not trust the mark to mean the same on a Chinese ring without seeing a qualified jeweler.
silver would probably win
At room temperature silver is a solid and mercury is a liquid. Both are silver in color.
No, thankfully it is not. Think of Alaska without a tree, shrub, bush, weed, grass, farm crops (without soil nothing could grow). Think of Alaska without the Kodiak Bear, the Moose, Caribou, wolf, Arctic Fox, Arctic Hare, wolverine, bald eagle, ptarmigan. (without flora the fauna could not survive), Think of Alaska without mountains and hills for if they were solid silver they would have been dismantled and sold on the world market until silver had no value at all.
No.
no