Fools Gold is also called iron pyrite or just pyrite. It is composed of iron and sulfur FeS2
You don't make it. "Fools Gold" is iron pyrite and it can be found everywhere. Take a magnet to a pile of sand and you will pull out iron pyrite when you run the magnet through it.
Pyrite is formed from the combination of sulfur and iron in hydrothermal and other conditions.
inorganic because it is a mineral
There isn't much for examples of fools gold in everyday items that you have in your house. About the only thing i can think of besides looking at a piece of fools gold in pictures on the internet or at a local rock shop or museum would be to crumple some tinfoil up and color it a dark gold. Where you see the small, almost square patterns in the tinfoil is a bit like fools gold. Iron Pyrite, this minerals metalic luster and pale brass-yellow hue have earned it the the nickname "fools gold" because of its resemblance to gold.
Fools gold is iron pyrite, a brassy colored mineral with a metallic lustre that people sometimes mistake for gold.
Fools gold is iron sulphide (FeS2) or also known as pyrite.
Fools Gold : pyrite .
hit it with a hammer: if it shatters its fools gold, if it flattens it is probably gold.
There is no real gold in fools gold.
the dencity of fools gold is 5.0
The fools
real gold does not sing it sinks and so does fools gold.
No, fools gold or iron pyrites is less dense than gold.
Fools gold is known as iron pyrite
fools gold
inorganic because it is a mineral
chalcopyrite is called fools gold because it's lustre looks like gold!
Iron pyrites is commonly known as 'Fools Gold' as it is has a shiny golden colour.
Alluvial gold, Reef gold,and Fools gold