painted canvas filled with foam rubber and cardboard boxes
A parasitic cone (or satellite cone) is the cone-shaped accumulation of volcanic material created by eruptions from fractures other than the central vent of a volcano.
The cone rating of a clay or glaze is the temperature at which the clay matures. So if a cone 10 clay is fired to cone 5, the resulting pot will not be completely matured. This may or may not cause a problem, depending on what the piece is used for. For example, a cone 10 porcelain which is fired to cone 5 and not glazed will still be somewhat porous.
Generally speaking, you will need low temperatures for majolica. Firing at cone 03-04 should be more than enough for this type of ceramics.
Mount Fuji is a composite volcano.
Yes, as long as the glazes are meant to be fired to the same cone. Putting a cone 6 and a cone 10 glaze on the same pot would not be a good idea. But putting two, three, four, etc. glazes of the same cone on one pot is perfectly fine. Just understand that glazes may be stable by themselves, but when another glaze is added on top that may create instabilities such as crazing or running. The biggest problem I have had with combining glazes on one pot is running. Just make sure to put the pot on stilts or on a waste slab so you don't have to grind glaze off the kiln shelf.
Claes Oldenburg produced the ice cream cone sculpture in March 2011.
yes.
Yes It is on the top of a tall building in Germany.
The cone fell on the floor.
stalagmite
No, it isn't.
False
Stalagmite.
False
Cone shaped deposits that rise from the floor of a cave are called Stalagmites. This is easy to remember as it contains a letter 'G' as does ground. While a Stalactite, which hangs down from a cave ceiling, contains a letter 'C.'
Stalagmites.
That is a stalagmite.