i think metals saty shiny after 1000s if years because the metal is reactive.
It does not rust or tarnish because gold will not chemically combine with any substances in the air
The length of time a volcano remains active can vary greatly. Some volcanoes may be active for a few days or weeks, while others can remain active for years or even centuries. It depends on various factors such as the volcano's eruption pattern, magma supply, and tectonic setting.
Because they do not conduct electricity <><><> Sorry- above answer is DANGEROUSLY incorrect- ALL metals conduct electricity- gold and silver especially. However, non-reactive metals do not tarnish or rust- they stay pretty.
Plastic bags are made from polymers that take hundreds to thousands of years to decompose in the environment. They break down into smaller pieces known as microplastics, which can persist in the environment indefinitely, posing a threat to wildlife and ecosystems. This is why people often say that plastic bags "stay forever."
The levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere stayed constant for thousands of years because of the carbon cycle, which moves carbon throughout the air, oceans and land. There was also no burning of fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas), and nobody had cut down the great forests of the world.
No, brass is a metal that will stay for thousands of years in landfills and rubbish dumps without breaking down.
What do you mean how do you make a shiny Pokemon stay shiny if you get a shiny Pokemon it stays shiny ok!
No. None of the Group 1 and Group 2 elements of the periodic table, the alkali and alkali earth metals respectively, stay shiny when exposed to air. They all react with moisture in air, and they tarnish quickly. A number of other metals will not stay shiny, either. Iron can be polished, but it will oxidize (rust) if left in air. Some metals will not react with air or the moisture in it, and some will. The results are mixed in that there are a lot of transition metals (Groups 3 through 12 on the periodic table), and each one would have to be evaluated independently (or with its "group mates") to discover if it would stay shiny. Links are provided to some relevant Wikipedia articles. The links are to the groups of metals, and each element in the Group chart is a hyperlink to that element. It should make it easy to do a quick search of the metals to get a complete answer, if that is what is desired.
Anywhere from days to thousands of years
No matter what Pokemon it is and if it is shiny it will stay shiny if you trade it or migrate it, trust me i know i traded my shiny banette to Pokemon xd and its still shiny.
Yes.
YES
Yes.
Anywhere from days to thousands of years
Anywhere from days to thousands of years
Anywhere from days to thousands of years
"Yes the code is to make all wild Pokemon shiny so when you catch it will always be shiny even when you trade it" *I AM IMPROVING THIS ANSWER* No, they won't be. It's a lie. There is no code (yet) that makes Pokemon PERMANETLY shiny no matter what you do, I am sorry... =(