It is the largest producer of such mineral in the world (4500 tonnes on 2010).
It is the largest producer of silver in the world; so much that it can be exported to other countries for a handsome price.
The last silver 100-peso coins were minted in 1977, so that is the approximate date when Mexico dropped off from the silver standard.
It's not pure silver. Pure silver is too soft for use in coins so it's alloyed with 10% copper. Please see the related question for more.
Sterling silver is 925/1000 silver so there are at least 925 milligrams silver in a gram of Stirling Silver.
Sterling silver contains 92.5% silver, so there are 4,625 grams of silver in 5,000 grams of sterling silver.
factories and cars
Yes, you can use Google from Mexico, and you can do searches in Spanish. They even have an office in Mexico, so they definitely have Google in a lot of ways. :)
Absolutely not! Silver is MUCH more plentiful than gold. If There were more gold than silver, silver would COST more than GOLD!
Mexico has very little citizen participation. There is so much corruption that the government and the citizens do not care for each other.
yes they do,very much so
Of course Mexico has electricity; as a country they consume 183.3 Terawatts/hour per year or 125 watts per capita. They rank as the 17th largest power consuming nation.
There are three silver halides used: silver bromide, silver chloride and silver iodide. Silver chloride doesn't absorb very much light and silver iodide is hard to develop. So they use silver bromide, with a little bit of the other two to make the emulsion work in ways silver bromide can't do alone.