Silver Rock File |
Minerals Downunder | Rock Files | Fact Sheets |
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Like gold, silver is an attractive and valuable metal. Silver has been used for thousands of years to make coins, ornaments and jewellery. It has provided riches for many a civilization, including the ancient Greeks, the Romans, the Tang Dynasty in China, the mediaeval Saxons, and the Spanish and Portugese in the 16th century. Today we tend to think of silver only as a source of objects such as cutlery, teapots and jewellery, but it actually has many other uses. In 1813 the first photographic image was made using silver nitrate, and today the main use for silver is in developing film - for graphs, movies and television. Imagine life without silver! |
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Use |
Description |
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Film |
About 1/3rd of all silver produced is used in photographic film and paper (mostly as silver bromide), including print, TV, X-ray and video film. About 5000 colour photos can be taken using only one ounce of silver. |
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Electrical |
As silver conducts electricity so well (and it also won't corrode and therefore overheat and cause fires) it is used for switches, contacts and fuses in almost all electrical appliances, from microwaves to dishwashers, TVs to PCs. A typical washing machine contains 16 silver contacts. |
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Soldering |
Soldering (often with an alloy of silver, brass and zinc) and welding account for large quantities of silver usage, due to its strength and relatively high melting point. |
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Defrosting |
As silver conducts heat so well, it's used in car rear-window de-misting lines, transferring heat onto the window glass to clear it of frost. |
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Jewellery and Silverware |
Being malleable, ductile and attractive, silver has been used for jewellery and other ornamental pieces since before Roman times. Often it is mixed with copper (7.5%) to make a tougher alloy called 'sterling silver'. |
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Mirrors |
Because silver is the most reflective material known, it is used in mirrors. |
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Health |
Silver is used in some tooth fillings, to make a substance that treats burns, as a wire to keep broken bones still while they heal, in thin plates for bone replacement, for surgical drainage tubes, and to purify water from bacteria. |
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Money |
Silver was one of the earliest metals used to make coins, although today only Mexico has any silver in its coins. In Australia, the last coin to contain silver was the 1966 fifty-cent piece, made from 80% silver and 20% copper. 'Silver' coins are generally now made from nickel and copper. |
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Batteries |
Silver batteries are more powerful, smaller and longer-lasting than normal batteries and are therefore especially useful in hearing aids, space satellites and portable TV cameras. |
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Silver plays an important part in Australia's history, as the first mine developed here was a silver-lead mine near Adelaide. Two early and famous discoveries of silver in Australia were at the Broken Hill deposit in NSW (1883) and the Mt Isa deposit in Queensland (1923). Within three years BHP was producing a third of the world's silver, along with lead and zinc, and today Mt Isa is the largest silver producer. Australia ranks in the top six silver producers in the world. Almost all of Australia's silver-producing mines are underground. Silver-bearing rock (ore) is blasted, scooped up by front-end loaders, taken in large trucks to underground crushers, then hoisted to the surface in skips up one of the shafts or taken by truck up a spiral road. At the surface, the ore is crushed further, mixed with water and other special chemicals to remove the waste rock and float the silver ore so it can be skimmed off, then heated and treated in other ways to purify the silver and separate it from the lead. |

This image is taken from the Australian Mines Atlas, and is accurate as at March 26, 2008