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Difference between revisions of "Ore"

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Revision as of 02:06, 18 February 2018

This article is about the current version of DF.
Note that some content may still need to be updated.

Ores are left behind after mining certain varieties of stone. Ore can be smelted to create bars of pure metal or combined to create alloys. Many ores are quite valuable as mined without being refined, and a mason or stone crafter can work them the same as any stone. However, ores fall into the economic stone category, and so must be designated for non-restricted use in the z-stone menu. Others can be combined when initially smelted into alloys, while others must first be made into bars of pure metal and then those combined to create the desired alloy - see the alloy article for details.

Most ores are fire-safe material. Some are also magma-safe.

Each normal metal ore "stone" produces four bars of refined metal when smelted. Metal ores with two possible metals listed below always produce 4 bars of the first metal, and have a chance of creating 0-4 bars of the second metal as well. Adamantine ore cannot be smelted directly; it must be processed at a Craftsdwarf's workshop first. Different rules apply to creating alloys.

Note that in some cases ore value (given below) and metal value are not the same (Bismuth, Iron ores). Alloys, too, often have a higher value than the ores/metals they are made of. In most cases furniture made from the ore is as valuable as furniture made from a pure (non-alloy) metal, while requiring significantly less processing. However, furniture produced directly from ore cannot be recycled, and refining the ore will generally produce an additional metal bar.

Nearly all unmined ores are represented by the £ symbol. Exceptions are native aluminum, bismuthinite, and magnetite (which appear as ^, %, and ~, respectively), as well as cinnabar and cobaltite (which appear as £ but cannot be refined into mercury or cobalt as they would be in real life).

Appearance Ore Found in Metal created Value Metal value
£ Adamantine, raw1 The depths Adamantine1 250 300
^ Aluminum, native All Igneous Extrusive(S) Aluminum 40 40
% Bismuthinite Granite(S) Bismuth 1 2
£ Cassiterite All Alluvial(S), Granite(V) Tin 2 2
£ Copper, native All Igneous Extrusive(V), Sandstone(V) Copper 2 2
£ Galena All Igneous extrusive(V), All Metamorphic(V), Granite(V), Limestone(V) Lead, Silver (50%) 5 2 (10)
£ Garnierite Gabbro(V) Nickel 2 2
£ Gold, native All Igneous(V), All Alluvial(S) Gold 30 30
£ Hematite All Sedimentary(V), All Igneous extrusive(V) Iron 8 10
£ Horn silver Native silver(S) Silver 10 10
£ Limonite All Sedimentary(V) Iron 8 10
~ Magnetite All Sedimentary(L) Iron 8 10
£ Malachite Limestone(V), Marble(V) Copper 2 2
£ Platinum, native All Alluvial(S), Olivine(V)2, Magnetite(V), Chromite(S) Platinum 40 40
£ Silver, native Granite(V), Gneiss(V) Silver 10 10
£ Sphalerite All Metamorphic(V) Zinc 2 2
£ Tetrahedrite All Stone(V) Copper, Silver (20%) 3 2 (10)
(L) - occurs in large clusters
(V) - occurs in veins
(S) - occurs in small clusters
1 - Note that raw adamantine/adamantine does not follow all the usual rules for an ore/metal in several respects - see article for full discussion.
2 - Due to a bug, native platinum actually occurs in olivine as small clusters rather than veins.

See Also:

Sedimentary
Igneous
Intrusive
Extrusive
Metamorphic
Ore
Economic
Other