NO! the can used to be green but the liqued was not.
yes
No, it has alwase been a brown. colour. the green cola is just a myth.its true but it goes black Ashwell remember
Vegemite is a brown colour. The colour comes from concentrated yeast extract
No. The myth started due to the original colour of the famous contour bottle, which was green. The concentrated syrup of Coca-Cola is purple, but when it is mixed with all the other ingredients it becomes brown.
It was originally green, but after drink colors is added in the formula, thus creating the brown tint.
Layer colouring is when on a map the colour brown is a high point eg: mountains and then yellow then green.
coca cola was always brown in color
No, that's an urban legend. It was originally sold in green bottles, giving it that impression, however the liquid inside has always been brown.
four parts KNO3 to six parts suger melt and ster over a low heat till it goes brown then pack it in to a container. when lit it should give off a cloud of brown smoke (If you add colouring to the mixture the colour of the smoke will be that colour).
It depends on the species. Their usual colouring is a mixture of green, brown yellow and black patterning - which helps it blend into its natural environment (rain forest areas).
The platypus does not actively employ camouflage, but its natural colouring allows it to blend in with its surroundings. It is brown in colour, with more yellowish fur on its underbelly. It naturally camouflages in with the colour of the water in which it swims and the bushland around its riverbank burrow, but it is unable to change its colour to match its surroundings.
Beneath their sharp, defensive spines, echidnas have fur which varies in colour from light brown to darker brown, reddish brown and sometimes black. The further north an echidna lives, the lighter the colouring. They can be quite light brown in northern areas of Australia, and black in Tasmania.