I have researched "Glues for marble", this is professional glue for granite and marble, follow the directions and it will work great for your purpose. I have used all kinds of glues
and found that designer glues (formulated for a specific material) work best for the types of materials they were designed for, rather then the multi-purpose glues.
Allstone ASII20 Instant Install 29 Minute Epoxy is a super fast curing epoxy for natural stone, marble & Granite. It's one of the fastest curing epoxies available for professionals! It gels in about 14 minutes and cures in just 15 more - to make a toal of 29 minutes from initial mixing until full cure (like a polyester resin) - The Epoxy is so strong, bonded joints can't be broken with hammer and chisel 29 minutes after mixing! Always use gloves & eye protection when using this product.
Epoxy will glue aluminium to marble.
Weather resistance mix used in building containing marble ,lime and glue
Polyurethane construction adhesive like Sikabond Construction Adhesive will glue cork to marble. You could also use a hot glue gun.
Colla di marmo is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "marble glue".Specifically, the feminine noun colla is "glue". The preposition di means "of". The masculine noun marmotranslates as "marble".The pronunciation will be "KOHL-lah dee MAHR-moh" in Italian.
It often can, depending on the glue. Give it a try.
Use a good marble shining powder all over the area.
An epoxy resin two part glue may be suitable.There may be issues with marble that is outside in a climate where frosts occur. Marble is porous and any moisture absorbed will expand upon freezing, possibly damaging the marble.
stick to something immovable with glue.
Only on certain surfaces. It only works for marble, concrete, and linoleum.
silicon caulk will glue wood and marble. clamp it, give it plenty of time to dry, and assuming its not some structural joint, it should last for ever.
Answer Difficult to judge from here. If the adhesive was brown it may have penetrated the marble you need to grind the marble and use hydrogen peroxide. A treatment only for VERY experienced professionals. If the marble has been wet for a few days, there is probably also some rust the stone. Marble may contain pyrite (fools gold, iron ore). Suggest you ask a marble restorer to have a look. Check the yellow pages "granite" or "marble" or "natural stone"
use super strong glue and then use fill (from b&q) and it should stay :)