24-Karat Nuggets About Gold

Fascinating facts about our favourite precious metal

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Fascinating facts about our favourite precious metal

1. Pure gold is so ductile (translation: stretchy), a mere 28 grams of it can be drawn out into a thread 80 km long without breaking (at which point it also would be too thin to see). If you did this to all of the existing gold in the world, it would wrap around the earth 11 million times.

2. Contrary to popular belief, biting on gold is not a reliable way to tell whether it’s genuine—other metals are also soft enough to show teeth marks. And though many champs chomp down on their prizes, Olympic gold medals haven’t been made from that metal since the 1912 Summer Games in Stockholm. Modern gold medals are mostly silver; those from the 2016 Games in Rio contained only 1.2 per cent gold.

3. The Nobel Prize medal is still made of gold, though it was downgraded in 1980, when it went from 23 karats (24 is pure) to an 18-karat core coated in 23-karat gold. The gold in each medal is worth about $8,000 (Rs 6,00,700).

4. A naturally yellow element, gold changes colour when mixed with other metals, which also gives it added strength. White gold contains nickel or palladium. Rose gold gets its hue from copper. There’s even green gold, which has silver and sometimes zinc or cadmium. To determine how much gold is in any piece, divide the karat content by 24 and multiply by 100. The ­resulting percentage is the amount that is gold.

5. Gold has been used in medicine for millennia. The ancient Romans made dental bridges out of it, a practice they learnt from the Etruscans. For much of the 20th century, doctors reduced their rheumatoid arthritis patients’ pain and swelling with intramuscular injections of gold compounds that have anti-inflammatory properties. Today, some oncologists use gold compounds to shrink cancerous tumours.

6. The term ‘bullion’, which refers to gold bars or coins ready to be traded, comes from the Latin word for ‘boil’. That’s how to remove gold’s ...

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