v50 Steam/Premium information for editors
  • v50 information can now be added to pages in the main namespace. v0.47 information can still be found in the DF2014 namespace. See here for more details on the new versioning policy.
  • Use this page to report any issues related to the migration.
This notice may be cached—the current version can be found here.

Density

From Dwarf Fortress Wiki
Revision as of 07:03, 21 September 2019 by Zippy (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This article is about the current version of DF.
Note that some content may still need to be updated.

Density is a material property that, along with the volume of the object, affects the weight/mass of an object made from the material.

Density influences weight, and tests show that weight affects how much damage blunt-force weapons do. Additionally, lightweight edged weapons or attacking parts made of certain materials seem to have difficulty piercing tissue layers. Apparently, density in Dwarf Fortress is in kg/m3*. Density also affects fall damage. DF simulates falling by shooting the ground at you, so denser floors do more damage.

(* For example, in the real world, the density of pure gold is 19.32 grams/cm3, which works out to be 19,320 kg/m3, the same numeric value as the density of DF Gold (see table below).)

Density of some materials

Note that not all forms of items are the same size, and so are not comparable when considering actual weight for practical applications, such as a door prize. A stone (including raw ore) has a size of 10,000 cm3 and a log of wood 5,000 cm3, while a bar of metal (or a block of stone or wood) have a size of only 600 cm3, a difference of ~16.67:1 for stone vs. metals, or ~8.33:1 for wood vs. metals.


Name Type Density Notes
Feather tree Wood 100 Least dense wood, found only in dry, good biomes
Papaya Wood 130 Second least dense wood, found only in dry, tropical biomes
Candlenut Wood 140 Third least dense wood, found only in dry, tropical biomes
Adamantine Metal 200 Least dense metal
Raw adamantine Stone 200 Least dense stone
Kapok Wood 260 Fourth least dense wood, found only in dry, tropical biomes
Willow Wood 390 Fifth least dense wood, found in "wet" biomes, most widespread of "light" wood
Bone Organics 500
Leather Organics 500
Silk Organics 500
Yarn Organics 500
Tunnel tube Wood 500 Least dense underground wood, found only in caverns
"typical" wood Wood 600 There are nearly about twenty varieties of wood at 600+/-20, about twenty (unlisted here) that weigh less,
and about twenty (unlisted here) that weigh more. See Wood for a full list and discussion.
Mangrove Wood 830 Densest wood found in wet, tropical biomes
Persimmon Wood 835 Densest wood found in dry, temperate biomes
Olive Wood 990 Densest "normal" wood, found only in dry, tropical biomes
Divine metal Metal 1000 Second least dense metal
Glumprong Wood 1200 Densest above-ground wood (by far), found only in dry, evil biomes
Blood thorn Wood 1250 Densest wood, underground, found only in caverns
Lignite Stone 1250
Jet Stone 1320 Least dense non-economic stone
Earthenware Ceramic 1360
Plant cloth Organics 1520
Stoneware Ceramic 2000
Saltpeter Stone 2105
Petrified wood Stone 2200 Least dense "magma-safe" stone
Gypsum relatives Stone 2300
Gypsum Stone 2320
Porcelain Ceramic 2403
Glass Gem 2600
(General) stone Stone 2670
Ordinary gem Gem 2670
Aluminum Metal 2700 Least dense "normal" metal
Limestone Stone 2710
Marble Stone 2780
Calcite Stone 2930
Diamond (any) Gem 3520
Cobaltite Stone 6295
Zinc Metal 7135
Tin Metal 7280
Lay pewter Metal 7280
Galena Stone 7500 Ore of lead
Pitchblende Stone 7600 Most dense "magma-safe" stone
Iron Metal 7850
Steel Metal 7850
Cinnabar Stone 8100 Densest non-economic stone
Bronze Metal 8250
Nickel Metal 8800
Copper Metal 8930
Silver Metal 10490
Lead Metal 11340
Gold Metal 19320
Platinum Metal 21400 Densest metal
Native platinum Stone 21400 Densest economic stone (and ore)
Slade Stone 200,000 Densest stone, difficult to mine, brutally slow to carry if you do