Yes bronze sells for $10 a pound while silver sells for $7.50 a pound
Platinum tends to be worth more than gold by weight, but as prices fluctuate, sometimes the gold price does go higher than the platinum price. Silver, at least in recent history (probably all of history) is worth significantly less than both gold and platinum.
Yes, because they are not made anymore and are collector's items.
1921 Morgan dollars are very common, no matter what the mintmark is. Coins in any less than uncirculated condition are only worth silver scrap, about $23 at the time of writing. Uncirculated 1921 Morgans generally go for less than $50.
certificate is worth from $10 to $150, depending on the series, with series 1928E being the most valuable. A $1 silver certificate from other years can be worth a little more than face value, depending on the condition. Silver certificates can also be used as regular money.
Very definitely. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1935 US 1 dollar silver certificate with HAWAII on it?" for more details.
Yes gold is the highest you can get
No. A silver metal is better than a bronze metal.
No it is not. Sterling silver is harder and the cost of Sterling silver is far steeper than that of bronze.
no green<bronze<silver<gold
No, the opposite. And at that, bronze is an alloy, and not one pure metal
one is silver and one is bronze The Silver Star Medal is a higher award for bravery than the Bronze Star Medal. The Bronze Star Medal was issued to any Infantryman who fought in combat. The Silver Star Medal is silver and has a ribbon that is prodominately blue. The Bronze Star Medal is identical in size and design except it is bronze and has a ribbon that is mainly red.
1 cent. It's plated. All 1952 cents were made of bronze. And in any case, the U.S. has never made a silver cent - it would have more than a dime's worth of silver in it, and no one was interested in losing 9 cents on every coin.
There is no such coin. All 1955 cents were struck in bronze. Cents have never been struck in silver. The only silver-colored cents released to circulation were the famous 1943 "war cents". You have either an altered coin that someone plated with a silver-colored metal, or a novelty item made privately using a different metal than bronze.
If there was, then it would be of some random color.
Yes. Silver coins are worth more than face value.
It depends on the sizes of each. However, in general, gold is worth SO much more than bronze that unless the gold cube is EXTREMELY small and the bronze plates are EXTREMELY large, the gold is going to be worth more.As of this writing, gold is about $1200 per ounce, while bronze is < $10 per POUND.
It is 90% silver and worth a bit more than $10 at current silver prices.