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Difference between revisions of "40d:Vein"
Revision as of 01:49, 8 March 2010
Veins and Clusters
If a stone is not a layer stone, then it is found within a layer or another stone as a vein or a cluster. Veins and clusters do not jump z-levels, except by coincidence - a vein or cluster is limited to one z-level, but that doesn't mean the same stone can't be found above or below as well if the conditions (the surrounding stone) are right.
Non-layer stone formations occur only in one of these four patterns:
- Large cluster - An oval that occupies nearly half of a 48x48 block, area-wise, and completely contained within the boundaries of that block, which tends to center them. These huge ovals consistently measure near 20 x 40 tiles, and average perhaps 750 stones each. Only one appears per block, and while veins and small clusters can be found in some few stone types, large clusters typically do not consist of useful or valuable stones (magnetite and bauxite being notable exception).
- Generally speaking, if a block contains a large cluster, it will not contain any other independent veins or small clusters - additional minerals will still show up if they explicitly occur within the cluster itself (such as native platinum veins appearing within magnetite clusters or chromite within olivine). Additionally, raw adamantine veins are a notable exception, in that they can also extend between Z-levels.
- Vein - A sinuous line of the material crosses part of the block. These vary from 1-4 tiles wide within a single vein and average about 100 stones each, but veins with over 200 stones have been reported*. When a vein ends, it does not start again unless it was broken by another vein, cluster or erosion (see below).
- (* It's ~possible~ that these are 2 identical veins lined up end-to-end, but it's unclear if there is an upper limit as to how big a single vein can be.)
- Small cluster - A sprinkle of 1 to 9 adjacent tiles. Multiple small clusters of different materials may be in the same block. These average 4-5 adjacent stones each and do not span more than three tiles in each direction. (That is, all tiles are enclosed in a 3x3 square area.)
- Single Gem - Rare gems show up only as a single example within a small cluster of similar precious gems; for example, a star ruby will only be found within a cluster of rubies, and a clear diamond will only appear in a cluster of faint yellow diamonds, etc. (Since "small clusters" occasionally have only 1 gem in them, it's theoretically possible that a rare gem could be found alone - this would, indeed, be rare.)
Rarely, two separate veins (of the same or different stone/ore) can be found "doubled", two next to each other, or (also rarely) folded back on themselves. Unrelated veins and clusters can intersect or overlap with each other - only one type of stone/ore/gem will be found in any one tile, however.
Note that erosion (during world-gen, pre-embark), magma (pools and pipes), water (brooks, rivers and pools), pits and chasms may reduce exposed veins and clusters to a fraction of their original starting size, and/or cut through them, exposing only the remnants, or two parts of a single vein in two nearby areas on the same z-level.
It is common to find certain gemstones embedded only in certain veins or large clusters. For instance, to find rubies and sapphires, explore bauxite clusters; for diamonds, one should follow any kimberlite veins they find, which in turn are found only in gabbro layers. Knowing what stone (or ore) contains what veins and clusters can be useful in exploratory mining and to understand the information given to you before you embark on a new game, and complete information for each can be found on the wiki page for that stone/ore/gem.
Raw adamantine is neither a typical stone nor metal ore, and veins of raw adamantine do not follow any of the normal patterns. They tend to be narrower, more spidery, and in fact are the only veins to (predictably) connect across z-levels, up and down within that 48x48 area block.
See also
- Stone
- Ore
- Gem
- Soil
- Exploratory mining
- (also, any individual types of stone, ore, or gem, by specific name - for instance, granite or native gold.)
- And, for newer players, The Non-Dwarf's Guide to Rock