I understand that the bite test was used by frontier merchants as a low-tech way to assay gold, which worked because elemental gold was softer than some of the less valuable alloys that might otherwise be mistaken for gold.

But Olympic gold medals contain less than 10% gold. They’re exactly the type of forgery the bite test is intended to root out. I’ve even seen athletes breaking their teeth on silver or bronze medals which makes even less sense to me.

Is it all just a big fuck you to the IOC, mocking them for being too cheap to spring for real gold?

  • br3d@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    At this stage it’s a trope that people imitate, perhaps without really thinking about it. Originally it was almost certainly an ironic joke about the value of the medals, playing on the old-fashioned bite tests that would be used for for items of dubious worth

  • dustyData@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    The gold surface gets dented, nothing more personalized than a medal with your teeth marks on it.

  • Valmond@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Just FYI the gold medal is made of silver with a gold surface. The silver medal is made of silver, for bronze IDK.

    Or so it was in the Bejing olympics anyway (with an inlay on the back of the medal that specific olympics).