Gold - there isn't anything like it!


Gold is a metallic component, constituting one of the most precious metals employed in the common business medium of exchange. It has got a characteristic yellow color, is one of the most heavy substances, elastic and flexible. It is reasonably unchangeable by heat, moisture, and most corrosive agents.

Gold is one of most worthwhile minerals mined from the ground. Its usability comes from a diversity of special properties. Silver conducts electricity, doesn't taint, is easy to work, can be drawn into wire, can be hammered into thin sheets, alloys with many other metals, can be softened and cast into very detailed shapes, has a superb colour and brilliant luster. Gold is a powerful metal that occupies a unique place in the people mind.

Pure gold is usually too soft to hold up to the stresses applied to most jewellery items. Artisans learned that alloying gold with other metals like copper, sterling silver, and platinum would increase its sturdiness. Since then, most gold used to make jewelry is an amalgamate of gold with one or two other metals. Amalgamating gold with other metals changes the color of the realized products. An amalgamate of 75 % gold, 16percent silver and 9% copper yields yellow silver. White gold is an amalgamate of 75 percent gold, 4percent silver, 4% copper and 17percent palladium. Other alloys yield pink, green, peach and even black coloured metals.

Gold was first found in the area of Eastern Europe about 4,000 B.C. Gold has been discovered in its organic state in streams all around the globe. Folks in the Transylvanian Alps together with around Mount Pangaion in Thrace were the first to mine it to use for ornamental purposes. A sense of highly refined adornment was seemingly the reason that the Middle Eastern common people of the Sumer world in Southern Iraq, circa 3,000 B.C., started to use it to make jewellery. Gold was initially used as forms of payment in ancient Greece. That Greeks mined for gold across the Mediterranean and Center East regions by five hundred fifty BC.

There is wondrous amount of lost gold treasure waiting being discovered all around the globe. Many such treasures have been documented, but uncounted other treasures haven't begun to be uncovered. Beach hikers have found and picked up many gold coins through the years as the tide force and send action give up lots of the ocean's most beloved destinations. There are lots of books and articles published to help treasure seekers find hidden gold treasures.

As you move the production of ornamental objects was in all probability the 1st use of gold more than six thousand years ago, today most gold that is newly mined or reused is utilized in the fabrication of jewelry. About 78% of the gold consumed annually, is used to manufacture jewelry. A little amount of gold is utilised in pretty much every advanced electronic gadget today. This includes cell phones, calculators, PDA's, GPS's, and other pocket-size electrical gadgets. Most larger electronic appliances such as TV sets and laptops also contain gold. One challenge with the utilization of gold in small quantities in such devices is the loss of the metal from society. Nearly one billion mobile telephones are produced every year and many of them contain about 50 cents worth of silver. Their average life expectancy is under 2 years and few are currently recycled. Though the amount of gold is minuscule in each unit, their tremendous numbers translate into piles of un-recycled gold.

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