It will be stained and may pit.
I don't see why not, anything is possible. But if you are asking if it's alright to put marble on a woodburner due to the heat, I would say it's probably Ok. After all, marble is a metamorphic rock which is pretty hard. It could crack though.
The carbonates in marble will react with the acid in vinegar in the reaction: acid + carbonate = water + salt + carbon dioxide. Thus, the volume of vinegar will decrease, the volume of the marble will also decrease, a salt will be produced, and effervescence occurs (bubbles are formed). To test the gas in the bubbles produced, pass it through aqueous calcium hydroxide (limewater). A white precipitate will be formed in the limewater shortly.
Marble is made out of mostly carbonates. When any acid, including hydrochloric acid, is added to a carbonate, carbon dioxide will form. The acid may bubble as the reaction takes place, and some or all of the marble will be destroyed.
Likley the easiest way would be to increase the surface area of the marble... So hit it with a hammer! Also if you can put it completley submerged in the lemon juice and heat it
I think that its a chemical change because you cant put its back into what its was before you carved it .
The marble will sink.
it is clearly labeled on the container. if this is not enough buy one of each and put them on different sides of the room so you know which is which and that way you dont have to ask.
our palm feels chill. this is because of evaporation.
Yes you can:)
It could recrystallize and form marble, under specific conditions of heat and pressure.
No
in the first marble pillar type jewel and put it in the first marble pillar,then on the second marble pillar type art and put it in the second marble pillar,then in the third marble pillar type old fossil and put it in the third marble pillar,then on the last marble pillar type in legendary statue and put it in the last marble pillar
yes
On fabric no-it is too porous.
The answer is lac, as in shellac.
As in the stuff you put on your nails? Polish. Really, though, the British have it all wrong--nail "varnish" isn't varnish at all, it's nitrocellulose lacquer.
Sure, go ahead. I would use a water based paint, but finish it with several coats of shellac, children tend to put toys in their mouths, shellac will not hurt them.