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Difference between revisions of "v0.34:Magnetite"

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==In the real world==
 
==In the real world==
Magnetite is the most magnetic of all the naturally occurring minerals.  It is often found in the form of black sand.
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Magnetite is found in ingenous batholiths (very large bodies of solidified magma). So it would be more accurate (and balanced) if magnetite was found in intrusive igneous such as Granite, rather than sedimentary layers which are made up of weathered rocks, which probably don't contain magnetite, and would not form in such large clusters.
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Magnetite is the most magnetic of all the naturally occurring minerals.  It is often found in the form of [[black sand]]. This is due to igneous rocks containing magnetite being weathered and transported into seas.
  
 
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Revision as of 12:43, 19 July 2014

Magnetite
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Uses

Location

Properties
Fire-safe Magma-safe
Contains

Wikipedia article

This article is about an older version of DF.

Magnetite is an ore of iron. It appears as large, oval-shaped clusters. A magnetite cluster may sometimes contain veins of native platinum, which can continue outside of the cluster itself.

In terms of metalsmithing, magnetite is identical to hematite and limonite. However, magnetite is distinguished by the extreme size of each deposit compared to the other iron ores - while a vein might hold 100 tiles of ore, a cluster can contain around 750.

In the real world

Magnetite is found in ingenous batholiths (very large bodies of solidified magma). So it would be more accurate (and balanced) if magnetite was found in intrusive igneous such as Granite, rather than sedimentary layers which are made up of weathered rocks, which probably don't contain magnetite, and would not form in such large clusters.

Magnetite is the most magnetic of all the naturally occurring minerals. It is often found in the form of black sand. This is due to igneous rocks containing magnetite being weathered and transported into seas.

Sedimentary
Igneous
Intrusive
Extrusive
Metamorphic
Ore
Economic
Other