More than likely, yes. The diamond itslef would not melt, and with a bit of luck, the setting may congeal around the stone when the stove cools enough for a search.
No. Because 200 degrees Celsius is 392 degrees Fahrenheit, which is 228 degrees Fahrenheit lower than the 620 degrees Fahrenheit required to melt the lead.
It depends what it's made of. Normal ceramic is unlikely to melt but would probably crack. Steel might melt in an extremely hot fire. Plastics would melt.
It depends on the brick material."The Iron Age, Volume 110" from 1922 states that:fireclay bricks melt at 1560 °C to 1725 °Cbauxite bricks melt at 1565 °C to 1785 °Csilica bricks melt at 1700 °C to 1750 °Cclay firebrick burning temperature is 1200 °Csilica brick burning temperature is 1400 °C.A thermal lance burning at around 4000 degrees Celsius will melt through general brickwork and concrete.Bricks are created by melting clay in kilns. The temperature of the kilns varies from 900 °C to 1200 °C, according to "How clay bricks are made" by IBStock.Zircoa states that their bricks withstand 2000 °C.
Petri dishes are generally made out of glass, so they will not melt if microwaved. If it is made of plastic, it may melt - but I would not expect it to.
sweet n low tastes so nasty it would melt anything:)
A furnace.
No, lead has a melting point of 327.46 C.
Yes.
the Coke supplies carbon monoxide to reduce the ore in a blast furnace and supplies heat to melt the iron.
Yes, they would melt in summer and even in winter, they will stain people's hands and possibly their clothes.
inanimate object can melt ice quickly.ex microwave, furnace, flame thrower, ect
No, otherwise it would melt when it's burning like a metal does.
Considering its burning hot in egypt I think the ice cream would melt.
it will burn it would probably burn at first and melt the ice and water does not encourage burning so the coal stops burning
sand,water and and then put in furnace to melt and then it dries out
Yes, unless you melt them in a blast furnace, they are solid at room temperature.
Aluminium