GCarty wrote:
Shorttail wrote:
Measure its mass and volume, divide one by the other. If you get over 19 grams per cubic centimeter, it's pretty solid... or filled with something of higher value. If not, well, at least you can figure out what metal or alloy it is instead.
The two main metals which would have a similar density to gold are tungsten and uranium.
Yes, it could also be filled with osmium or platinum. Fortunately the gods blessed us with the hammer, which is able to tell gold apart from all of these. I had written quite a long text about how to specifically tell tungsten and uranium from gold, when I realized hammering it savagely would be the easier choice no matter what.
Edit: I can't imagine a gold bar would lose substantial value from being deformed. At worst it would have to be remelted.
+1 computer-science-applied-to-real-world-problems-counter