Depends on what the money is made of. Paper won't melt but burns at ~450 f.
Gold melts at 1063 degrees Celsius
Copper melts at 1083 degrees Celsius
Zinc melts at 419 degrees Celsius
Silver melts at 961 degrees Celsius
I'm not sure that peanut butter can actually "boil", but no, tin doesn't melt until almost 300 degrees Celsius.
Yep. They were made from 1971 to 1978. They have a melt value of $.21.
Money is not meaningful - quit making money:-o
paper money paper money
Other colonies have money.
It does melt.
Yes you can melt it. But you want a high temperature.
i believe its thesame as your body temperature that's why it melt in your mouth and pocket
well it freezes at 0c or 32f so it will melt if subjected to a higher temperature
ice melt in the room temperature
Miners do not and are not allowed to melt gold into money.
Increasing the melt temperature the material can be transformed in a gas.
The surrounding temperature increases the temperature of the ice block causing it to melt.
Skin does melt at the temperature of 200 degrease C.
ice can melt at room temperature. Anything that is liquid at room temperature would, in its frozen state, melt at room temperature. Oils, beverages and mercury - if in a frozen state - would melt when exposed to room temperature.
They melt because the heat in the air is warmer than the temperature of the ice cubes.
160°