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  2. Aluminum Can Prices: Are They Still Worth Collecting?

    www.aol.com/finance/aluminum-prices-much-yours...

    The exact number of cans per pound can't be quantified due to different measurements. Depending on the brand, estimates show there are usually 32 to 35 cans per pound. For smaller, more common 12 ...

  3. Metal prices - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metal_prices

    These prices are more an indication than an actual exchange price. Unlike the prices on an exchange, pricing providers tend to give a weekly or bi-weekly price. For each commodity they quote a range (low and high price) which reflect the buying and selling about 9-fold due to China's transition from light to heavy industry and its focus on ...

  4. Feedlot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feedlot

    Once the young calves reach a weight between 300 and 700 pounds (140 and 320 kg) they are rounded up and either sold directly to feedlots, or sent to cattle auctions for feedlots to bid on them. Once transferred to a feedlot, they are housed and looked after for the next six to eight months where they are fed a total mixed ration [12] to gain ...

  5. International Tin Council - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Tin_Council

    The International Tin Council (ITC) was an organisation which acted on behalf of major tin producers and consumers to control the international tin market.. An International Tin Study Group, which was established in 1947 to survey world supply of and demand for tin, led to the treaty, the International Tin Agreement, signed in 1954, and the formation of the ITC in 1956.

  6. Tin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tin

    ITC dissolved soon afterward, and the price of tin, now in a free-market environment, fell to $4 per pound and remained around that level through the 1990s. [72] The price increased again by 2010 with a rebound in consumption following the 2007–2008 economic crisis , accompanying restocking and continued growth in consumption.

  7. On the Sunday before Thanksgiving, a grocery store here was plumb out of eggs. An hour and a half north in Richfield, some eggs could be had, but they weren’t cheap. That dozen cost $1.70 more ...

  8. Scrap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scrap

    According to the International Resource Panel's Metal Stocks in Society report, the per capita stock of steel in use in Australia, Canada, the European Union EU15, Norway, Switzerland, Japan, New Zealand, and the US combined is 7,085 kilograms (15,620 lb) (about 860 million people in 2005).

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