by ZenOps » Mon Apr 09, 2012 9:38 am
I'd bet on nickel running out before silver. Technically we already have run out of nickel on three occasions, WWII when there was high demand, 1970 (for whatever reason) and 2007 LME default (natural depletion?)
We have never technically "run out" of silver. There was the hunt brother cornering the markets, but that wasn't really a shortage. There was the demonitization of silver in coinage (but gold was also demonitized as coinage in 1933)
Technically, the US has less nickel as coinage today, about $8 worth of nickels per person, 6.5 ounces and a little bit of nickel coating on the other coins; than there was circulating silver back in 1963 (approximately 10 ounces in dime, quarter, half and dollar form) And noone knows exactly for sure how much silver from circulation from that era is still out there, Was 50% of it remelted into bullion? 90%? How much was consumed in photography? How much in electronics? Its actually quite a guessing game.
Both are pretty scarce though, copper and gold are still readily available - but if you are considering a 100-year timeline, gold will eventually become more scarce as a physically heavy element you must go deeper and deeper to get it once you've got the surface gold. You might be waiting on a much much longer timeline for gold to achieve its full wealth potential (Gold is the money of kings, as they have multi-generational empires to maintain)
My bet is on nickel, because I know that the majority of surface nickel is micro-ionized in the soil and is technically not "minable" (unless you want to kill off vast tracts of arable land) and/or is in a form that is really only acid washable out of rock.
Beaver collector