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Bronze and alloy
Bronze is a metal alloy consisting primarily of copper, usually with tin as the main additive.
Paiste also use a secret Bronze alloy in their top-end cymbal ranged, thought to be B12 or B14, adding brightness without much compromise on strength
The Bronze Age is a period characterized by the use of copper and its alloy bronze as the chief hard materials in the manufacture of some implements and weapons.
Bronze has several characteristics that made it preferable as a construction material: although it is relatively expensive, does not always alloy well, and can result in a final product that is " spongy about the bore ", bronze is more flexible than iron and therefore less prone to bursting when exposed to high pressure ; cast iron cannon are less expensive and more durable generally than bronze and withstand being fired more times without deteriorating.
However, by learning to get copper and tin by heating rocks and combining those two metals to make an alloy called bronze, the technology of metallurgy began about 3500 BC with the Bronze Age.
Bronze is an alloy of copper and approximately 10 % to 20 % Tin.
Rich burial objects show that from the 13th to 11th century BC, the Laugen-Melaun culture ( Laugen-Melaun A ) flourished, due to the mining of Copper, the source material for the alloy Bronze.
Bronze jian were often made in a somewhat similar manner: in this case an alloy with a high copper content would be used to make a resilient core and spine, while the edge would be made from a high tin-content alloy for sharpness and welded on to the rest of the blade.
Bronze is an alloy of copper, containing about two percent tin.
Bronze is an alloy of copper and tin.
Phosphor bronze ( sometimes sold with the shorter name Phos Bronze ) is an alloy of copper with 3. 5 to 10 % of tin and a significant phosphorus content of up to 1 %.
Bronze is an alloy of different metals but the most common blend ( in piercing jewelry ) is 90 % copper and 10 % tin.
Made of Paiste Signature Bronze alloy.
They are crafted from Paiste's proprietary " Signature Bronze " alloy.
High end cymbals made of the same Turkish B20 Bronze alloy the discontinued Twenty series was, featuring a brilliant finish on all models.

Bronze and copper
Bronze does not necessarily contain tin, and a variety of alloys of copper, including alloys with arsenic, phosphorus, aluminium, manganese, and silicon, are commonly termed " bronze ".
During the past few centuries of detailed, scientific study of the Bronze Age, it has become clear that on the whole, the use of copper or bronze was only the most stable and therefore the most diagnostic part of a cluster of features marking the period.
An ancient civilization can be in the Bronze Age either by smelting its own copper and alloying with tin, or by trading for bronze from production areas elsewhere.
The Chalcolithic ( khalkos " copper " + lithos " stone ") period or Copper Age, also known as the Eneolithic / Æneolithic ( from Latin aeneus " of bronze "), is a phase of the Bronze Age in which the addition of tin to copper to form bronze during smelting remained yet unknown by the metallurgists of the times.
Originally the term " Bronze Age " meant that either copper or bronze was being used as the chief hard substance for the manufacture of tools and weapons.
In 1881 John Evans recognizing that the use of copper often preceded the use of bronze distinguished between a transitional Copper Age and the Bronze Age proper.
The Copper Age features the use of copper, excluding bronze ; moreover, stone continued to be used in a minor industry throughout both the Bronze Age and the Iron Age.
The earliest metal daggers are of Beaker copper and appear in the early Bronze Age, in the 3rd millennium BC, predating the Bronze Age sword.
The Bronze Age sees a shift of emphasis from the communal to the individual, and the rise to prominence of increasingly powerful elites, whose power was enshrined in the control of the flow of precious resources, to manipulate tin and copper into high-status bronze objects such as swords and axes, and their prowess as hunters and warriors.
In place of less easily available tin, arsenic was added to copper in the Bronze Age to harden it ; like the hatters, crazed by their exposure to mercury, who inspired Lewis Carroll's famous character of the Mad Hatter, most smiths of the Bronze Age would have suffered from chronic poisoning as a result of their livelihood.
As for technology, reconstruction indicates a culture of the late Neolithic bordering on the early Bronze Age, with tools and weapons of very likely of " natural bronze " ( i. e., made from copper ore naturally rich in silicon or arsenic ).
In South Asia earliest available Bronze age swords of copper were discovered in the Harappan sites, in present-day Pakistan, and date back to 2300 BC.
The transition from the Stone Age to the Bronze Age was a period during which modern people could smelt copper, but did not yet manufacture bronze, a time known as the Copper Age, or more technically the Chalcolithic, " copper-stone " age.
** Afanasevo 3500 — 2500 BC, Siberia, Mongolia, Xinjiang, Kazakhstan-late copper and early Bronze Age.
Bronze forged out of copper and tin resulted in the production of more durable axes, knives and other tools and weapons.
Much of the copper for the production of bronze probably came from the copper mine on the Great Orme, where prehistoric mining on a very large scale dates largely from the middle Bronze Age.

Bronze and tin
Bronze is the preferred metal for top-quality bells, particularly bell metal, which is about 23 % tin.
The boundary between the Copper and Bronze Ages is indistinct, since alloys sputtered in and out of use due to the erratic supply of tin.
Snodgrass suggests that a shortage of tin, as a part of the Bronze Age Collapse and trade disruptions in the Mediterranean around 1300 BC, forced metalworkers to seek an alternative to bronze.
During the Bronze Age, the Aeolian prosper by means of maritime commerce in an area extending from Mycenae to the British isles, from where tin was imported.
The use of crucibles in the Iron Age remains very similar to that of the Bronze Age with copper and tin smelting was being used to produce bronze.
Bronze, whilst easier to work with, was much less commonly available ( requiring copper and tin, which are almost never found in close proximity ).
A Bronze Age archaeological site, where early evidence of tin mining was found, is at Kestel.
Phosphor Bronze ( 94. 8 % copper, 5 % tin, 0. 2 % phosphorus ) is also used in cryogenics.
The wetland habitats and western dry heath communities were formed, since the Bronze Age, by the mining of the alluvial tin deposits.
The Caergwrle bowl is a unique object dating to the Middle Bronze Age, originally manufactured from shale, tin and gold.
Cornwall and neighbouring Devon had large reserves of tin, which was mined extensively during the Bronze Age by people associated with the Beaker culture.

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