No. Bronze is a metal alloy consisting primarily of copper, usually with tin as the main additive.
Zinc doesn't belong with aluminium, bronze, and gold because it is not a precious metal like the others.
None are gold silver or bronze, the are usually nickel and alloy with a thin coat of bronze etc. The value is to the holder so they don't have to be of precious metal.
Bronze IS a metal.
Bronze is a type of metal.
a lump of precious metal is called at nugget if talking about gold
Yes, bronze is typically worth less than gold. Bronze is an alloy made from copper and other metals, while gold is a precious metal valued for its rarity and beauty. Gold has a higher market value and is more sought after than bronze.
Bronze is an alloy of Copper 90% and Tin (Sn) 10%, so it is metal.
copper+ jast= bronze
the third place winner gets the bronze metal.
No. There is no precious metal in any Australian general circulation coin. The Australian One and Two Dollar coins are made from an aluminium-bronze alloy.
No, zinc is not a precious metal. It is a necessary industrial metal.
Bronze is an alloy, not a metal to be purified.