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Italma

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1951 one Lira coin, made of Italma

Italma (acronym of italiano alluminio magnesio, meaning "Italian aluminium magnesium" in Italian) is an aluminium alloy. It was produced by A.S.A. (Alluminio Soc. Anonima) and was introduced shortly after World War II in order to being used in the new coinage of the Italian lira, which lasted until the adoption of the Italian euro coins in 2002. It comprised 96.2% aluminium, 3.5% magnesium, and 0.3% manganese.[1]

References

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  1. ^ Giovanni Calchera, "Le nuove monete metalliche della Repubblica Italiana" Archived 2016-04-04 at the Wayback Machine, in Annuario Numismatico Rinaldi, 1948 (in Italian).

See also

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