Im not sure, but a medium to high steel type for sure. im trying to find more info for sure the type, but if you´re wondering what kind of metal it is, its steel .
Edit: It is steel, but more specifically I'm almost certain it's mangalloy. It's very resistant to high impact stress from the constant impact from the train wheels.
steel is used to make railway lines because steel is very flexible and has the ability to expand.
During summer as you know metal expands.
steel is used because when it expands it does not change it shape, it only becomes bigger making sure it is safe to travel by train.
so that way the railroads wont be bumpy and won't go of the trail
the railway lines are made of metal so as to be attracted by the magnets at the bottom of the train. this is done so as to prevent the train from falling of the railway
No they are not, Aluminium is too soft a metal for that job. Railway tracks are made out of steel (Iron).
Most of the time, yes.
yes
Nope
the mixture of copper and tin is made to bronze.
None. Some medals are made of bronze, notably the Victoria Cross.If you are asking what METALS make up bronze then the answer is copper and tin (sometimes arsenic)
Yes, with a pickaxe. Mine Tin, then mine copper. After that use them in a furnece to get a bronze bar. -Happy Smithing
3500 bc
Who is the artist that made a bronze statue of nakoma for the frank Lloyd foundation.
Steel , Brass, Bronze, Copper,
they are made of bronze
Bronze
Bronze.
If you win it in the Olypics then its bronze... but others might not be
'The Thinker' is bronze cast statue.
Copper not bronze
The Bronze Age
Bronze is usually made from copper and tin and has no gold content.
They are made out of steel and hydrolicks
Ancient Chinese people used bronze for spears periodically. They traded small lumps of bronze for goods.
It is not: "celesial bronze" is a made from Rick Riordan's imagination.