you cant ok..........................
Go to the Ruins of Alph and smash the rocks (it may take a long time) then go to Pewter City's Museum and a person will turn it into a pokemon.
i think you have to give the fossils to the museum in pewter city
You Can Resurrect It On, By Game: Red, Blue, Green, Yellow, Fire Red And Leaf Green: Cinnabar Laboratory, Gold, Silver, Crystal, Heart Gold And Soul Silver: Pewter Museum, Ruby, Sapphire And Emerald: Devon Corp., Diamond, Pearl And Platinum: Oreburgh Museum, But What It Does, It Will, When Resurrected, Turn Into A LVL 20 Lileep.
you have to get the helix fossil, which is the right one in mt. moon and bring it to the poké-lab on cinnaber island. he will turn it into an omanyte for you.
Pewter turns it black, Copper does turn your skin green though.
Yes, chlorine can cause sterling silver to tarnish and turn black. It is best to avoid wearing sterling silver jewelry in chlorinated water to prevent this.
u go to pewter museum in kanto , talk to the guy at the computer
Theres a guy in the pewter museum who will turn your fossil into pokemon.
No it will not rust as it doesnt have iron in it, but it may corrode and turn black over time
The acidity in skin has tendency to cause silver to turn black or green. This is a corrosive agent that can be cleaned with a quality silver cleaner.
Silver exposed to the air will combine with the Oxygen in the air to form Black Silver Oxide.This is especially true of the purer samples of Silver like Sterling Silver and purer.
NO. Silver will tarnish and turn black, though. Silver will but Gold shouldn't wrong answer: Gold can turn dark grey/ black also (if you don't know / don't answer)
yes
Silver jewelry may turn black due to oxidation when it comes in contact with air and sulfur-containing substances. This reaction forms silver sulfide, resulting in a tarnished appearance. Silver jewelry that is plated with rhodium or made with high-quality silver alloys may be less prone to tarnishing, while pure silver or sterling silver jewelry is more likely to tarnish over time.
Silver Nitrate does not turn blue - it turns purple-black and then black. It was the basis for early photography before the digital age.
Silver in the fine powder form is black, that is happening on slight friction of silver metal, which is soft