Cherry pie filling can turn black in a metal pan due to a chemical reaction between the acidity of the cherries and the metal, particularly aluminum or iron. This reaction can cause the pigments in the cherries to oxidize and darken, resulting in a blackened appearance. To prevent this, consider using glass or ceramic bakeware, which is non-reactive and won't interact with the filling. Additionally, adding a bit of lemon juice can help maintain the color by balancing the acidity.
They are not turned into metal. Rather, they are melted into a genetic slush which is the filling for the metal. The metal is more like the skeleton for the Human Reaper.
Pony was a greaser and Cherry was a Soc.
Silver in the fine powder form is black, that is happening on slight friction of silver metal, which is soft
It is false that cherries grow on cherry blossom trees. Flowers called cherry blossoms grow on cherry blossom trees.
There is no 'uniform' for Heavy Metal, and makeup is more common to wannabe Glam Rock than it is to true Metal (corpse paint and such used by the Black Metal sorts notwithstanding). Heavy Metal is in part about individuality. Trying to turn it into a uniformed thing is completely anathema to that.
The metal you are referring to is likely copper. When exposed to air, copper reacts with oxygen to form copper oxide, which gives the metal a dark black or greenish color. This process is known as oxidation.
You are either born black or not, and you can't simply "turn" black at will.
because if they get old they turn black
Not naturally it can't turn black.
Peaches have been known to turn black.
you cannot turn any metal to gold you can only extract gold from its ores by washing and roasting..
we have to get fire and get metal on it.it will be changed in to liquid