3500 bc
the mixture of copper and tin is made to bronze.
The bronze Olympic medal is made of about 97% copper and 3% zinc, with no actual bronze content. The name "bronze" comes from the color of the medal, not its composition.
None. Some medals are made of bronze, notably the Victoria Cross.If you are asking what METALS make up bronze then the answer is copper and tin (sometimes arsenic)
Yes, with a pickaxe. Mine Tin, then mine copper. After that use them in a furnece to get a bronze bar. -Happy Smithing
no it is not. you can find all the known elements on a periodic table of elements online or in a science textbook
they are made of bronze
Bronze
Bronze.
If you win it in the Olypics then its bronze... but others might not be
'The Thinker' is bronze cast statue.
The Bronze Age
Copper not bronze
Bronze is usually made from copper and tin and has no gold content.
Ancient Chinese people used bronze for spears periodically. They traded small lumps of bronze for goods.
It is not: "celesial bronze" is a made from Rick Riordan's imagination.
Yes I believe they were. Giacometti made all of his sculptures out of bronze and they all have a rough surface. I hope I helped!
They didn't. Bronze Age people made weapons out of bronze. Neolithics made weapons out of stone and bone.