Where Metals Are Found On Fantasy Worlds!

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  • Опубликовано: 31 май 2020
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Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @Salsmachev
    @Salsmachev 4 года назад +1883

    Metal is often found in rifts, especially epic guitar rifts.

    • @pougetguillaume4632
      @pougetguillaume4632 4 года назад +44

      Underrated masterpiece of a comment

    • @JoeMakaFloe
      @JoeMakaFloe 4 года назад +24

      I like the way your brain works

    • @charadremur333
      @charadremur333 4 года назад +6

      Nice job

    • @EthanWinter-
      @EthanWinter- 4 года назад +1

      Well said !Σ(×_×;)!

    • @stuckonaslide
      @stuckonaslide 4 года назад +6

      i don't know how a broken guitar can epic but ok
      i just saw this a year later and either i had a stroke or im missing a word. ive changed my mind though, funny joke.

  • @awkwardperson_yt8765
    @awkwardperson_yt8765 4 года назад +1512

    1:38 "Oil and gas are hydrocarbons derived from the remains of ancient plankton, not dinosaurs"
    *How many other lies have I been told by the council?*

    • @valentinmitterbauer4196
      @valentinmitterbauer4196 4 года назад +322

      - Giant insects lived not among dinosaurs, but millions of years before them
      - The T-Rex lived closer to us than to the last stegosaur
      - Birds and mammals lived among (younger) dinosaurs and didn't evolve just after their extinction
      - Flowering plants and snakes evolved after dinosaurs did (they evolved around the time birds did)
      - Bird- hipped dinosaurs did not evolve to birds, but lizard- hipped dinosaurs did
      - Pterosaurs and Ichtyosaurs are not dinosaurs, but birds technically are
      - Oviraptor did not steal and eat eggs
      - There is no evidence of Dilophosaurus haveing a ruff around its neck like a frilled lizard
      - However there is evidence that suggests that many dinosaurs, as the t- rex, were almost fully covered in plumage
      - Dinosaur fossils are not their physical bones, but stone castings that filled out the cavities their bones left behind
      - Most bones you see at a museum are fake, because finding a complete skeleton is unlikely and the real bones are too precious to get screws put into them (the cave paintings in Lascaux Cave are fake too, the real ones are right next to them)

    • @livedandletdie
      @livedandletdie 4 года назад +58

      That's also a lie, Oil and gas are hydrocarbons derived from the remains of not so ancient algae, not plankton as a matter of fact, plankton no, plankton is too small, and therefore most of it doesn't sink to the bottom of the oceans, algae though would, reason being that all of the oil on the northern half of Earth is from a single algae, an older waterfern known as Azolla.
      Other than that a lot of things, such as Diamonds are rare, to that oil is a scarce resource, it's not a scarce resource we have a minimum of 5000 years left of it, at current consumption rates, it's just a lot harder to get a lot of it.
      Carbondioxide is bad, that's also a lie, I mean it's not that good to breathe for us, but the Earth used to have 20 times more CO2 than it does now, and back then plant life thrived. It mostly disappeared 55 million years ago thanks to the world's fastest growing plant, the algae known as Azolla, which can double it's biomass weight in 3 days under the right conditions. Eventually overrunning all fresh water deposits, it's also known as moss fern.
      A lot of Scientists said so stuff is lies made up by media. We'd be dead by now if any of it were true. In the 90s they said we'd all freeze to death by 2003 due to global warming causing a new ice age, these so called climate scientists know nothing of climate nor science. Anyone can write a paper citing non-peer tested stuff. And Media and everyone who trusts media will blindly chug it down as truth. I always say, okay, cite your sources, when someone says global warming is real. No one, and I mean no one, have or could put forward any papers that actually contain a smidgen of scientific experiments.
      Oh and the other obvious things that people think are true, like everyone is born equal, everyone can do everything they just need to try hard enough, laziness is bad, etc. Laziness is one of the defining traits in people who've grown rich, if you're lazy you try to minimize the amount of work you need to do. No one is born equal, men are born with 6% more muscle mass than women, and will retain that 6% more muscle mass, then among men black men are born with roughly 3% more muscle mass than anyone else, they're also more often born with a longer wand, however their women aren't born with deeper wand receptors, nature is cruel sometimes. Oh and the obvious things like people are sometimes born with birth defects, and sometimes they acquire defects through life, such as feminism or scientology, or any other mumbo jumbo that you shouldn't believe in. After all, people should think for themselves, and think about what's best for themselves, not what's best for someone else, selfishness is a good thing, it's what keeps us alive, it's what keeps our families alive, it's what keeps our communities alive. Don't believe that rich people give to charity due to kindness, no, it's to improve their own public view.
      Other than that, there's a lot more that people lie about. However most people don't lie to deceive others, they lie out of ignorance, because they haven't been told the entire truth and therefore just spread that lie that they took for truth. Oh and most people aren't malevolent, they're just dumb, however there's a lot who are malevolent, like that bitch who yelled Can't you be more humane at me, yesterday when I threw a advertisement poster she illegally posted in my work place. I'm the freaking janitor I just do my fucking job, I can't help that that bitch had a garage sale and wanted everyone to know about it... However advertising on other's property without legal consent is a crime. She should be glad I didn't call the guards over.

    • @Vysair
      @Vysair 4 года назад +10

      @@livedandletdie In short, human had degraded into sheep aka simple animal and naive

    • @karnewarrior
      @karnewarrior 4 года назад +75

      @@livedandletdie
      Carbon Dioxide *is* bad, not because it's not a breathable gas (plants do that just fine) but because the life currently on the planet is not evolved for the heat having prehistoric levels of CO2 would induce, which results in desertification as plantlife dies out and the necessary support fungi and algae are eroded away by the winds.
      What's actually keeping the planet cool isn't just the atmosphere, it's the plant life turning sunlight into stored energy. As deserts spread across the planet, the amount of solar energy being converted into sugars shrinks, but it's still here. It instead enters into the water and into the rock where it emanates back into the atmosphere, further exacerbating the problem.
      A second issue is the rate at which the CO2 levels are increasing, which is so rapid as to be evolutionarily immediate. If this was all happening over the span of several tens of thousands of years every degree celsius or so, like it had been, life would've been able to adapt to the changing circumstances and recolonize the new deserts, or just never let them form at all. Instead, this is happening in the span of a couple generations, which doesn't allow for life to adapt, resulting in large-scale die-outs.

    • @monad_tcp
      @monad_tcp 4 года назад +4

      @@karnewarrior Even if we stopped using CO2 fuel, how many centuries does that buy us ? aren't we producing heat like crazy ? what's the next "enemy" water vapor trapping heat?

  • @Biblaridion
    @Biblaridion 4 года назад +4246

    Something that occurred to me recently: Would coal and oil only exist on planets with carbon-based life? If the native lifeforms were silicon-based, would that mean that instead of fossil fuels, they'd have huge deposits of sand or other silicate minerals? And if so, would that mean that if the silicon-based biosphere ever produced intelligent life, they would never reach the industrial revolution and therefore never achieve space travel?

    • @isaac2499
      @isaac2499 4 года назад +623

      so that is why we never have seen any!

    • @ziporasouthamericannongfu666
      @ziporasouthamericannongfu666 4 года назад +924

      That is actually a pretty good point, no away to refine steel without good concentrations of carbons

    • @jasonlewis4438
      @jasonlewis4438 4 года назад +779

      [Pasted from a separate comment] And would higher or lower gravity affect the depths and pressures where things like coal and oil are formed?

    • @NoverMaC
      @NoverMaC 4 года назад +138

      oh crap yeah....

    • @g4fly4ever8
      @g4fly4ever8 4 года назад +211

      @@isaac2499 So they exist
      They are just dumb
      And we are the attackers

  • @kevdeca
    @kevdeca 4 года назад +2854

    This video tricked me into learning geography and honestly i respect that

    • @lorddashdonalddappington2653
      @lorddashdonalddappington2653 4 года назад +171

      Geology, actually.

    • @spacecorpse3212
      @spacecorpse3212 4 года назад +70

      @@lorddashdonalddappington2653 does not matter he learnt something

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel 3 года назад +25

      @@lorddashdonalddappington2653 both, exshuelly

    • @lilapela
      @lilapela 3 года назад +3

      geology ypu meam

    • @oliverhalenius
      @oliverhalenius 3 года назад +17

      @@spacecorpse3212 now he learnt something more. Nothing wrong with that

  • @connorredding
    @connorredding 4 года назад +2255

    My minecraft brain thinking: Diamond is at level 12 and iron can be found everywhere

    • @Sir_Budginton
      @Sir_Budginton 4 года назад +208

      Actually I think it’s just coal that can be found anywhere, iron only spawns below y64

    • @petersmythe6462
      @petersmythe6462 4 года назад +114

      I really wish Minecraft ore placement was more interesting.

    • @connorredding
      @connorredding 4 года назад +20

      @@Sir_Budginton Especially in gravel

    • @dyslegein
      @dyslegein 4 года назад +10

      I want to like this comment but it's already at a nice number.

    • @svenskahugo3199
      @svenskahugo3199 4 года назад +35

      And mesas have large amounts of gold

  • @TreetopCanopy
    @TreetopCanopy 4 года назад +705

    This is so much better than my previous strategy-putting them wherever I want

    • @thesocialistlion2904
      @thesocialistlion2904 3 года назад +91

      Though that can help build what you wanted. At the end of the day I don't think your biggest complaint will be puting Iron in the wrong place

    • @l1mbo69
      @l1mbo69 2 года назад +75

      Put them wherever it benefits politics it's not like readers know geology, worldbuilding exists to make the world feel more real without any knowledge of geology there believability is not increasing one iota from this

    • @stellarx20
      @stellarx20 2 года назад +42

      Honestly, you can easily put certain things where you want to because you can decide "yep here's a random plate boundary because otherwise this area couldn't have tungsten deposits" or "yeah we're just gonna make it so that there's coal here by deciding that there was a tropic here"

    • @MGSLurmey
      @MGSLurmey 2 года назад +36

      @@stellarx20 This. If you're making your own world, you can make the reasons for the decisions to put materials where you want them. The important thing is to decide on something and be consistent with it. Rich, realistic history really makes a world feel alive.

    • @Attaxalotl
      @Attaxalotl 2 года назад +33

      There are two methods for placing ore deposits:
      This
      And my patented™ trademarked® system:
      Step 1. Find where some ore would be plot-convenient
      Step 2. Find what ore would be most plot-convenient
      Step 3. Place ore there because reasons

  • @kittenlord3572
    @kittenlord3572 4 года назад +1039

    tl;dr - In the ground

  • @velcalo
    @velcalo 4 года назад +658

    5:01 They generate below the surface, commonly with Iron and Coal at y:54, Gold at Y:29, Lapis at y:16 and Diamond and Redstone at y:12

    • @foosic1742
      @foosic1742 4 года назад +16

      Diamonds generate at Y:16, not sure about redstone tho

    • @ignaspetrauskas8763
      @ignaspetrauskas8763 4 года назад +20

      It's modded, so I dunno where is the oil?

    • @davidgumazon
      @davidgumazon 4 года назад +6

      Bruh "I downloaded every single mod" series put a lot of Isekai and Xianxia to shame if not every novel, in terms of usefulness of animal husbandry, farming, minerals and gemstones were enough to sustain entire civilization, planets and dimensions... and use equivalent exchange, quantum technology and beyond and etc, technologies would help Humanity able to create their own dimensions, pocket dimensions and weapons mass destruction not limited to the game. And the Ancient Builders went extinct because of that but luckily there are mods that's overpowered or cheat death and now the new era these the Builders, Miners and Crafters learn from their ancestors mistake so that after discovering new mods came from beyond Mineraftia Multiverse, so they decided to conquer Isekai and Xianxia instead of fighting themselves.
      *As Minecrafter they use Mods in their Arsenal and for Society.*
      Kids that were native to Minecraftia learned to build, farm and tame at young age and can build Houses and their own small scale Farms.
      Teenagers were to choose their occupations... well a LOT, and they're capable to build Cities in their own or a build a massive Country if full become a pledge Builder. Can build a massive Farms and Agriculture that breaks physics and potentially an automatic farming. Technologies can access a lot beyond the limits of the game and machines capable of put almost anyone in fantasy based worlds to helpless, so if Isekai of Demon Lords are hostile mobs, people would build a farms, a magic-science based technology can accelerate the demon lord's reincarnation and nullify their magic before killing it instantly with various grinding machine means within the demon lord's spawnpoint for infinite loot. Also the Technology we have as Minecrafter the capabilities are not limited to the game so we have access to discoveries of new exotic elements and energies such as various Magic, Science and Qi system, we're gonna exploit the system overcoming the limit of immortality granted by Qi through mass production of pills, scrolls and etc. discovery of training exploits also exploit the Ancient Magic Technologies and Dungeon's Technologies within Isekai to advance our Magic Technology into another new era beyond Minecraft imagination.
      The Minecraft engineers, experts were able to access the Command Blocks technology through [redacted] means and developed a new block which is new Reality Warping Machine based on Magic and/or Qi system after the expedition and war between dimensions throughout Isekai and Xianxia worlds conquered at large scale.
      Minecraftia completely changed the mindsets of the Civilization of Isekai and Xianxia worlds because power and strength from Isekai and Xianxia was overwhelmed by Complex Technologies and almost all wealth was devalued by Emeralds and Equivalent Exchange mod. Peace was enforced into Isekai and Xianxia. Each capable individual from Minecraftia can rule one or more dimensions of Isekai and Xianxia.
      Herobrine returns and Hackers appears doomed everyone in the Multiverses... *Story Ends*

    • @pikminman13
      @pikminman13 4 года назад +5

      @@ignaspetrauskas8763 There's oil, right in the ground, right there. Scoop it up with your hands.

    • @kanoslayer2735
      @kanoslayer2735 4 года назад +7

      @@pikminman13 "just bring me back a handfuls of oil, I'll put it up my ass and then we'll go to space"

  • @MarsAnonymous
    @MarsAnonymous 4 года назад +312

    Given how important its extensive limonite deposits were to kickstarting the iron industry in Africa and sustaining a high output of iron production in late Middle Ages in Europe and China, I'm surprised you didn't mention placing it in bogs and swamps, both current and recently dried out.

    • @jmlightning8045
      @jmlightning8045 4 года назад +52

      Bog Iron

    • @roidroid
      @roidroid 2 года назад +3

      @@jmlightning8045 🎶 bog iron on his hop 🎶.
      (I'll see myself out)

  • @semurobo
    @semurobo 4 года назад +108

    I have absolutely No interest in building my own fantasy worlds, but I learn so much about our world from your videos.
    And its always explained very understandable.
    I Just love this Channel.

  • @Dragrath1
    @Dragrath1 4 года назад +350

    One thing that should be noted is that ore wise a lot of the really interesting deposits like the gold from South Africa which formed as a consequence of the Vredefort impact basin and the nickel deposits of Subury Canada were formed as a consequence of the Sudbury Impact each of these shares the commonality of having formed due to a enormous asteroid capable of inducing a peak ringed crater The only such "recent" impact of this scale in the last billion years was the Chicxulub impactor but the valuable mineral deposits from such a young crater are still buried by tens of kilometres of rock so you will want such craters to be old.
    And you probably should have emphasized the role of hot spots as The enrichment of gold in Western North America is primarily due to the Yellowstone hot spot bringing an upwelling plume of material from the core mantle boundary.
    Also note that the historical ores were all largely sulfur loving chalcophiles as opposed to lithophiles as Lithophiles like Silicon Aluminum Titanium Uranium Thorium etc all are too strongly bonded to oxygen for any preindustrial level society to ever access without comparably advanced magic. This is why Arsenic Copper Lead Mercury have been known since antiquity while other elements such as Titanium Uranium and the Rare Earth elements were only discovered after industrialization. Lithophiles react on contact with oxygen effectively recombining into oxides so these pure elements can only exist in an anoxic environment and require complex multiphased reactions using halogens such as Florine and Chlorine under high temperatures and or pressures often requiring an electric current to separate out the final metal from the other reactants. There is a reason why for most of human history anything primarily composed of lithophiles would have just been called "rock" unless aesthetically pleasing enough to be a gemstone. Aluminum oxide is particularly known for its crystalline isomer corundum which with the right set of impurities is called either a ruby or a sapphire.
    The description of Lithophiles as "ores" has only occurred as a consequence of the later stages of the Industrial revolution as technology became sufficiently advanced that extraction could be economically feasible though it is largely on "feasible" due to companies not having to clean up the resulting pollution. See the Goldschmidt classification scheme of elements as it relates Earths formation history and structure to typical element occurrence. The point is no one is going to be able to discover Uranium without industrialization.
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goldschmidt_classification.
    Diamond deposits honestly deserved more of a discussion for how they formed largely due to the immense world building potential for the kimberlite pipe eruptions which can bring them to the surface. This volcanism doesn't really produce diamonds rather it is a chain reaction that acts like a CO2 chemical rocket from deeper within the Earth and can bring intervening material up to the surface when the volcanic rocket explosively punches a hole in the crust in a powerful supersonic pyroclastic eruption. Worse these eruptions can occur in chain reaction bursts where the triggering of one sets off other eruptions deep within the planet so just imagine a scenario where one of these volcanoes erupt suddenly as they strike without warning rising from deep in the Earth's mantle to the surface in a number of hours to days which puts our best rockets to shame. Volcanic pipe eruptions include both the Kimberlite eruptions that can occasionally bring up diamonds and apparently another extremely corrosive counterpart Lamporite pipes But without this type of eruption there would be no diamonds on Earth's surface as normal cycling processes within the planet take sufficiently long that any diamonds would revert into graphite. The commercial importance does make it hard to find information on these eruptions so their exemption is understandable but they would make one hell of a volcanic eruption.
    A final point of mention is that there is actually a surprisingly strong biological component to most ore formations on Earth as the subterranean biosphere primarily uses metals for respiration i.e. changing the oxidation state of metals in order to generate ATP reactions and these microbes are shockingly abundant throughout the Earth's crust wherever water and minerals capable of life supporting redox reactions is available but are particularly abundant in hydrothermal systems. Biomass wise they account for the majority of life on Earth occurring kilometres below the surface under high pressures and temperatures where the only thing preventing water from boiling is the high pressures. In fact prior to the Great Oxygenation event these microbes were the predominate form of life in the oceans with the largest number of microbes relying on Iron as their respiratory agent. (As far as I can tell the only respiratory metabolisms which don't rely on a water soluble metal ion are those based on sulfur based metabolisms and the sole example of an oxygen based metabolism the latter of which likely arose as a mutation from the reverse reaction of sulfur based photosynthesis.)
    In fact iron deposits on Earth are usually from the banded Iron formations which are now understood to be the fossil signature of oxygen triggered mass extinctions of anaerobic life. Yes most Iron ore on Earth is literally fossilized microbes from the greatest mass extinction events in Earths history. Provides an interesting context doesn't it?

    • @MrDemilich
      @MrDemilich 4 года назад +14

      Thanks for the information based on real world models, very informative :) but, for fantasy world builders, we have dragon fire/ ice/ acid and other fantastical elements that we can use to explain why our world is different from Earth as well as explain how or why we can mine all kinds of elements

    • @shadowsfromolliesgraveyard6577
      @shadowsfromolliesgraveyard6577 4 года назад +19

      This is all super interesting. Do you know any books that would be good further reading on this? Especially the bit about the subterranean biosphere.

    • @Menzobarrenza
      @Menzobarrenza 4 года назад +1

      That was super interesting and useful.
      Thanks.

    • @aloeparrish74
      @aloeparrish74 4 года назад +11

      WTF I love geology now
      Seriously though, this is an awesome comment and this is really interesting information

    • @Dragrath1
      @Dragrath1 4 года назад +12

      @@shadowsfromolliesgraveyard6577 hmm most of what I have read about the subterranean biosphere was from an article about the deep biosphere published in 2018. Sadly I think the actual Journal articles are largely locked behind a damn paywall... sigh.
      Here is the Eureka alert blurb on it
      www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2018-12/tca-lid120318.php
      deepcarbon.net/
      info.deepcarbon.net/vivo/publications?source=%7B%22query%22%3A%7B%22filtered%22%3A%7B%22filter%22%3A%7B%22bool%22%3A%7B%22must%22%3A%5B%7B%22term%22%3A%7B%22isDcoPublication%22%3A%22T%22%7D%7D%5D%7D%7D%2C%22query%22%3A%7B%22match_all%22%3A%7B%7D%7D%7D%7D%2C%22sort%22%3A%5B%7B%22_score%22%3A%7B%22order%22%3A%22desc%22%7D%7D%5D%2C%22from%22%3A0%2C%22size%22%3A20%7D
      The big issue is that a lot of this research is fairly recent or is confidential as incidental discoveries by fossil fuel and or mining exploratory studies which have commercial interests. Unfortunately I have a suspicion they don't really want us to learn about the deep biosphere as then people might start to think about the ecological ramifications. Apparently some of these organisms might be outside the conventional domain interpretation meaning at least that they have been down there for billions of years in fact the more I learn about the deep biosphere the more suspect this may be where life on Earth originated only to colonize the surface and perhaps even the oceans later with life going back and forth between these environments.
      Like for instance fungi seem to be Eukaryotes which colonized the subterranean biosphere as they keep finding more fungi deep underground from core samples for instance and that I suspect is probably how they likely colonized the land, spreading from below and eventually enabling green algae to colonize land via a symbiotic relationship which eventually led to plants.
      There are apparently even organisms which live in such extreme conditions underground that if you transferred them from Earth to Venus they could potentially survive on the **surface** or at least below ground and at the very least it supports the possibility there could be life on Mars and perhaps even at one point of time Mercury since we now know the planet has or at least had high levels of volatiles beyond what would be expected if it formed where it is now.
      It is somewhat of a tangent but there was a recent paper in Science advances which using comprehensive analysis of MESSENGER data determined that most of Mercury's strange "chaotic" terrain is caused by planetary scale sublimation ongoing for the last 4.1 billion years. The Sun has literally baked away most of the planet leaving only the high sublimation temperature material left over from the planets crust and mantle as well as the planets core.
      If true that raises grave worries about many of those close in exoplanets with orbits close to their star which is supported by the observation that close in planets around sunlike stars tend to be very young star systems relative to our own. It is complete speculation but I wouldn't be surprised if Mercury wasn't even originally the closest planet to the Sun perhaps there were other planets closer which have since evaporated and or crashed into the Sun.
      Some of those hot Jupiters found in the late 1990's are in orbits that have in the decades since had their period decay significantly suggesting they will crash into their star in a few million years. This is supported by their star systems being tens of millions of years old or less. In principal perhaps our Sun could have once sported a hot Jupiter as such a planet would likely have crashed into the Sun perhaps even before our Moon formed.. Um sorry I got way off topic um hope this in some way helps? ~~I get easily sidetracked~~
      Edited for clarity:11/11/2020

  • @SAOS451316
    @SAOS451316 4 года назад +250

    i think it's important to mention that it's more than the anaerobic environment that caused coal deposits to form. almost all of the coal on earth is from the carboniferous when lignin was evolved and no bacteria or fungi could effectively break it down, trapping carbon. if a world doesn't have a period where a lot of carbon-rich molecules get trapped at once coal is going to be rarer than on earth.

    • @timothymclean
      @timothymclean 4 года назад +18

      Of course, if you have Earth-like life, it will have had a period when lignin was newly-evolved.

    • @SAOS451316
      @SAOS451316 4 года назад +20

      Timothy McLean maybe so! a lot of people myself included have worldbuilding projects that don't have anything to do with earth life though so it was an important point to make imo. on my planet the closest things to trees use a natural resin polymer instead of lignin, for instance.

    • @arnoldthomsen6571
      @arnoldthomsen6571 4 года назад +1

      @@timothymclean Yeah of course, but things could always happen differently. it could have taken a lot less time for such microbes to develolp, not leaving millions of years worth of trees stacked on top of eachother, maybe just a few hundrew thousand years worth.
      It would make a big difference in the availability of coal.

    • @512TheWolf512
      @512TheWolf512 4 года назад +1

      But what about charcoal?

    • @Ratchet4647
      @Ratchet4647 4 года назад +4

      @@512TheWolf512
      Not an ore so it makes no difference.
      That's just made from wood burned in a hypoxic environment if memory serves.

  • @pand9826
    @pand9826 4 года назад +162

    I might as well be crying tears of joy, I've been trying to find resources to help with this topic and you've made a whole video about it you absolute legend

    • @512TheWolf512
      @512TheWolf512 4 года назад +2

      Go learn geology. My uncle was well educated in this exact topic all the way back in the soviet times

    • @marionforge2769
      @marionforge2769 4 года назад

      Exactly

  • @DrDeadlifts
    @DrDeadlifts 4 года назад +637

    This is literally the stage I'm at in my world-building: where are natural resources?
    Thank you for this! I absolutely love your videos and am so thankful that I'm not the only nerd out there who likes my fantasy to be grounded in a little realism!
    Along the same topic: Any thoughts on what certain environments might have on animal evolution?

    • @sourapple3845
      @sourapple3845 4 года назад +30

      Check out biblaridion, he's the master of speculative evolution

    • @DrDeadlifts
      @DrDeadlifts 4 года назад +7

      @@sourapple3845 thank you, I will! In my fantasy world all of the typical fantasy trope races (elves and such) all evolved from one proto-ancestor. Ive had trouble picturing how that might happen other than simple stuff like "dwarves moves underground and evolved to be shorter", and "orcs live in a predator-heavy environment that required them to be strong and breed fast"

    • @lyreparadox
      @lyreparadox 4 года назад +8

      I also recommend checking out Worldbuilding Notes - the cultures she creates are brilliantly unique and may offer some ideas for developing your fantasy races. If you can find them, the videos Life After People, The Future is Wild, or After Man: a Zoology of the Future - may give you some ideas about how environments can affect animal evolution.

    • @Tokmurok
      @Tokmurok 4 года назад +9

      Usually nature finds a way to adapt to anything. For example if your world had a flash star (star that bursts with radiation at intervals) then your plants or animal life might developed a way to sense this, and a form of protection. A shell or a mucous layer. But because flash stars generally give out low radiation when they do not burst your plantlife may be black to absorb as much as possible when it's not bursting. Or perhaps have a lighter colour incase they protect themselves too late.

    • @scorpixel1866
      @scorpixel1866 4 года назад +13

      @@Tokmurok Careful as you are describing the opposite of Darwinism.
      Life does not "adapt" actively, a Giraffe's ancestor did not stretch its neck more in order for it to grow longer.
      Instead, errors in genetic duplication of genitor cells ( *extremely* important, the spermatozoïds and ovules are the ones that need to mutate in order for a mutation to stay in future individuals) resulted in many different results.
      Most being inconsequential, many causing birth defects, some being detrimental or beneficial to the individual, either in general or its particular situation (environment, climatic events, food/predators/mates present, accidents), and those, in great part influenced with sheer luck, resulted in the dominance of that particular genetic trait.

  • @NoverMaC
    @NoverMaC 4 года назад +95

    Me: okay i just done a 3 hour practice maths paper I should get some rest-
    Artifexian: new video
    Me: oh well...

  • @Skarix
    @Skarix 4 года назад +102

    To be honest, I never thought about underground stuff in my world building... thank you very much!

    • @timothymclean
      @timothymclean 4 года назад +19

      Your dwarves are disappointed.

    • @Skarix
      @Skarix 4 года назад +3

      Oh yeah I completely forgot about dwarves too

    • @varana
      @varana 4 года назад +4

      No dwarves also means that a lot of ancient evils remain buried, so that's a plus.

    • @Ledabot
      @Ledabot 4 года назад +9

      Everyone's always worried about the buried ancient evil. Where did all the buried ancient good go?

    • @timothymclean
      @timothymclean 4 года назад +5

      @@Ledabot Either releasing sealed Good has barely any effect on the world, or Evil is too incompetent to seal Good away in the first place. Though both options mess with any kind of balance the two might have...

  • @entropic-decay
    @entropic-decay 3 года назад +28

    correction on diamond deposits: diamonds are actually surprisingly common, it's just ones large and pure enough for use as jewelry that are rare. this is how we have things like diamond dust coated grinders - they use the small, less pure diamonds for cutting thanks to their high strength.
    also, i used this for some of the planets on my hybrid sci-fi fantasy setting - Mithril deposits are formed from iron deposits in areas of abnormally high magic concentration, for example.

    • @chaosvolt
      @chaosvolt 2 года назад +7

      A lot of this is also basically marketing, the idea of diamond being elevated above the other cardinal gems (which also used to include amethyst before large deposits in South America tanked the value) is a modern perception.

    • @horserage
      @horserage 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/GzXeWlRzBqs/видео.html Actually, we snagged all the good deposits, within some degree.

    • @danicatempleton6745
      @danicatempleton6745 2 года назад +1

      Basically diamonds used to be rare until they found them in Africa and then they just kept pretending
      (A slight oversimplication of the course I took in the Science and Politics of Gems)

  • @Ziegrif
    @Ziegrif 4 года назад +27

    "Hello internet, let's world build."
    Aaaaaaaaand subscribed.

    • @Ratchet4647
      @Ratchet4647 4 года назад +2

      Happy you can join us!
      This an amazing channel.
      I recommend you watch older videos as they're gems.

  • @jenniferbeveridge131
    @jenniferbeveridge131 4 года назад +26

    0:25 - I was told somewhere that these plants were so new, in evolutionary timescales, that in addition to the water being low-oxygen there were not yet any bacteria or fungus which had evolved to decompose the dead trees?

    • @SuLokify
      @SuLokify 4 года назад +18

      This is accurate, most of Earth's coal is from plant life which existed before fungus evolved to break it down.
      However, this process still occurs today in environments which do not easily support fungi and aerobic bacteria, but not on nearly the same scale and scope as our oldest coal formations.

  • @jasonlewis4438
    @jasonlewis4438 4 года назад +225

    Question: Would higher or lower gravity affect the depths and pressures where things like coal and oil are formed?

    • @BlaBla-hq1bu
      @BlaBla-hq1bu 4 года назад +79

      Pressure not so much, but depth most certainly. Lower gravity, means larger depth to reach the same pressures (which are needed to form coal/oil/gas). Vice versa for higher gravity.

    • @Chrischi3TutorialLPs
      @Chrischi3TutorialLPs 4 года назад +18

      @@BlaBla-hq1bu Plus it may also affect the time it takes for those to form in the first place, as the lower gravity would probably also affect the speed at which the pressure builds up.

    • @jfp0763
      @jfp0763 4 года назад +6

      Just to say that if your world have a negative gravity so none of this works!

    • @user-ft3jq5vi2l
      @user-ft3jq5vi2l 3 года назад +11

      @@jfp0763 physics.exe has stopped working

    • @smartart6841
      @smartart6841 3 года назад +3

      @@jfp0763 negative gravity means it just repels itself into a mess of particles throwing themselves away from every other particle found, causing chaos

  • @Mical2001
    @Mical2001 4 года назад +43

    Diamonds will usually appear between Y level 0 and 15

  • @megamonsterbizepsmustafarh7385
    @megamonsterbizepsmustafarh7385 4 года назад +11

    Could you do a video on mapmaking scale? That's a part where I always struggle. What I mean with scale is how wide mountain ranges should be, how much a river would meander at a certain scale, or how rough coastlines should be. I'd be very pleased to see this!

  • @bri-ishmonkey
    @bri-ishmonkey 4 года назад +20

    You provide the best resources for world building. Thank you for helping us.

  • @bob2000ful
    @bob2000ful 4 года назад +10

    wow that small explanation about how oil is formed really blew my mind as I was watching it I realised I knew jack shit about something quite important for today's needs
    I really need to watch more on that subject

  • @NaidenLisichkov
    @NaidenLisichkov 3 года назад +13

    Time Stamps:
    0:09 - Coal
    1:37 - Oil & Gas
    4:39 - Ores

  • @paulb8030
    @paulb8030 4 года назад +11

    Best science class I've ever attended

  • @Stoneworks
    @Stoneworks 4 года назад +4

    !! I was looking for this kind of stuff a couple days ago- this is super helpful, thank you for this video!!

  • @OmegaTaishu
    @OmegaTaishu Год назад +2

    0:09 Coal -> 1:06
    1:36 Oil and gas -> 3:41
    3:24 Side note: Underground salt deposits
    4:38 Ores
    -> 5:39
    -> 6:42
    -> 7:30
    -> 7:52
    Two years later, and I'm still rewatching this guide.
    Thanks, Artifexian!

  • @amehak1922
    @amehak1922 4 года назад +5

    Underground, duh
    Btw diamonds are far more common than people think. The Debeer's company (which owns most of the mines) sells only a small percentage of the diamond they mine to keep prices high. Same reason why Lamborghinis are super expensive, they only make a few hundred a year instead of millions of units like Toyota does.

    • @sussurus
      @sussurus 4 года назад

      Nobody thinks they're rare and you're not special for knowing this fact. That doesn't change the fact that well-coloured, non-included clear diamonds are relatively rare and objectively valuable.

    • @amehak1922
      @amehak1922 3 года назад +1

      @@sussurus actually many people do think they're rare.

    • @sussurus
      @sussurus 3 года назад

      @@longnoseboi that's a fair point and a poor choice of word on my part.

  • @joratto2833
    @joratto2833 4 года назад +12

    Just gonna hop on the “this is exactly what I needed” train because it’s exactly true

    • @Netherdan
      @Netherdan 4 года назад +2

      This is exactly not what I needed because I'm procrastinating, but I like it

  • @JL-ti3us
    @JL-ti3us 4 года назад +18

    Stable interior explains diamonds in Africa then, all running along the stable interior

  • @toaster9922
    @toaster9922 4 года назад +35

    “where metals are found”
    *_shows a picture of a diamond, which isn’t a metal_*

    • @justnoob8141
      @justnoob8141 4 года назад +3

      I mean mineral in Starcraft look like diamond so...

    • @barkingnoise
      @barkingnoise 2 года назад +1

      @@justnoob8141 lots of crystalline structures can be composed of metallic compounds. But diamond is made of carbon specifically, which isnt a metallic element.

  • @arthurhill8185
    @arthurhill8185 4 года назад +18

    Would you ever do a video on fantastical alternatives to plate tectonics? Like, on one hand, if they're totally fantastical, there are no rules, but what features are important to keep even if part of the system is weird. Like, say, digging deep enough leads into a portal to hell, that's gonna have weird effects on geography if everything else is the same.

    • @jensbrandt7207
      @jensbrandt7207 4 года назад +4

      You might want to check out the Worldbuilding Pasta blog. They have a huge collection of alternative tectonic modes.

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel 3 года назад +2

      not SO fantastical. Venus has no plates but has volcanic activity.

  • @roberthill5805
    @roberthill5805 4 года назад +18

    Curious on how you would do fantasy metals like adamantine, where they come from meteors that go through the atmosphere. They might keep together and create a deposit on impact but quite a bit would fall off or be akin to metal flakes that would fall across the trail. Would these be likely to follow trails like the trash heaps do, or would they build up in other areas.

  • @rashkavar
    @rashkavar 3 года назад +1

    Wow, that's an excellent summary. I took mining engineering in university, and while most of my classes were on mine design and safety, not deposit spread (it was, after all, not mining geology that I was studying), this 11 minute video could have replaced about half of the class we had on ore deposits and honestly probably been more comprehensive. I am genuinely impressed, sir. Well done!

  • @MGDrzyzga
    @MGDrzyzga 3 года назад +4

    I'm going to have to revisit this a few times. I've been interesting in creating a salt lake with a high concentration of ores like chromium that could generate a toxic, low pH salt lake. And then throw a strange mangrove in it. Need to pick a reasonable location on the map.

  • @Kalleosini
    @Kalleosini 4 года назад +4

    OK I need you to read this.
    I thought this was going to be a video about where materials are found in certain franchises fantasy lore.
    what I got was a geology lesson about how and where materials form and collect in the ground.
    it was very well made and I learned a few things, great video even if I do not care about world building.

    • @sybro9786
      @sybro9786 4 года назад +2

      Here’s a tip, try to check what a channel usually posts before committing to watching a video

  • @MoltenSamurai
    @MoltenSamurai 4 года назад +6

    Been waiting for this for years!

  • @FireBowProductions
    @FireBowProductions 2 года назад

    This is the video that pushed me over the edge to subscribe. Been watching some of your videos to help me with my Homebrew world that I've be working on for over two years now, and the map is starting to look so much better for it. Thank you for making these videos.

  • @donttellnonna
    @donttellnonna 4 года назад

    I love your work. You are a big part why I got into worldbuilding and conlangs. The amount of research that must go into episodes like this must be quite significant. Keep up the amazing work.

  • @tophat665
    @tophat665 4 года назад +7

    A Dwarven guide to life's better things. Damn, Edgar, I've started saying " Doon!" When I finish a thing. I like. Carry on.

  • @caseyhinkson9043
    @caseyhinkson9043 4 года назад +3

    This is great! I needed this about 3 days ago when I was finishing up placing my copper and tin deposits on the world map for my bronze-age civilization. Looks like I did copper right, but I think I did tin wrong...

  • @sabinamcdaniel7412
    @sabinamcdaniel7412 Год назад

    Bless you. I have been trying to dig this information out of various sites for two days now. I cannot even communicate the extent of my gratitude to have found this video.

  • @MacAttack001
    @MacAttack001 Месяц назад

    Just found this by pure chance, what an incredible resource! Thank you VERY much!

  • @pixynowwithevenmorebelkanb6965
    @pixynowwithevenmorebelkanb6965 4 года назад +7

    WHERES THE URANIUM?
    also this is basically how to find ores

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel 3 года назад +1

      Where the source lead (Pb) is at. Lead decays from U-238. U-238 has a halflife about the same age as the earth, coincidentally, so where the uranium is found, probably less than half of that is lead.
      Depending on the heat, the lead might well melt and flow off elsewhere. Also lead oxides dissolve, somewhat famously, as the Romans found out.

  • @Bhananamilkshake
    @Bhananamilkshake 4 года назад +25

    Damn I’m too early. I can’t browse for funny comments now ;-;

  • @seyeruoynepotsuj
    @seyeruoynepotsuj 2 года назад

    I love how much you're actually TEACHING here! In a 10 min video you nail the core learning points of my entire masters degree.

  • @blitzkreg335
    @blitzkreg335 4 года назад

    You have no idea how much this helps me ! Thanks!

  • @astralwither8402
    @astralwither8402 4 года назад +136

    *fastest click in the west*
    yep, this is just a cheap way of saying "FIRST!!!111!!"

    • @Persac7
      @Persac7 4 года назад +3

      Dude this first meme is bad

    • @strbourne
      @strbourne 4 года назад +5

      Finally an original “First” deserving of a like

    • @declanedmison5442
      @declanedmison5442 4 года назад +6

      No one dared to ask his business, no one dared to make a slip
      For the stranger their among them had a mouse on his hip

    • @smartart6841
      @smartart6841 3 года назад

      @@Persac7 uts not a meme

    • @smartart6841
      @smartart6841 3 года назад

      @@strbourne agreed. Im liking it

  • @emmalucas4177
    @emmalucas4177 4 года назад

    This past week I've been trying to look into this exact question for my world, perfect timing! Great content as always

  • @terrasphere_3857
    @terrasphere_3857 4 года назад +1

    Thank you for posting this mate. This is a HUGE help to worldbuilders like me. I'm now quite confident I got most of my ore placements right, with just a few adjustments. Thank you again and keep up the great work!

  • @durt214
    @durt214 4 года назад +5

    "Traps can be found in a variety of locations"

  • @chrisgaming9567
    @chrisgaming9567 4 года назад +4

    I wish there was a way to automate this part

    • @Yohannai
      @Yohannai 4 года назад +5

      I mean, if you get realllllly into programming and have a complete map of your world with everything else already included...... it's possible. It certainly doesn't sound impossible. Just really long.

  • @LetMeDy
    @LetMeDy 2 года назад

    This is maybe one of the best video I've seen, thank you very much, it'll be so useful!

  • @anglicothemonkey3496
    @anglicothemonkey3496 4 года назад +1

    I've always struggled with this, so thank you very very much for making this video! Finally some direction as to where to place natural resources instead of my usual "just throw some deposits into the ground somewhere"

  • @TheDcraft
    @TheDcraft 4 года назад +3

    Ha, it's like we're on the same wavelength or something. Lately, it seems like you almost always put out a video on a subject I'm currently working on (like now) or just finished up (which is still good because it let's me check my work). Keep them coming😃😃😃

  • @bittergreed7553
    @bittergreed7553 4 года назад +24

    "Traps can be found in a veriety of locations", im concerned

  • @AFlockOfMidgets
    @AFlockOfMidgets 3 года назад

    Man I so much appreciate the work you do on this channel. The information Im looking for is so much more accessible here, and information dense. Its hard to even know what Im searching for when I just to random google searches.

  • @KhaoticPhoenix
    @KhaoticPhoenix Год назад

    Exceptionally informative and highly engaging in its aesthetic. This video is diamond quality.

  • @Dysputant
    @Dysputant 4 года назад +3

    Where is Iron ? i need it for my tanks to take Oil from Avian empire !

  • @charliecrome207
    @charliecrome207 4 года назад +3

    This is all very interesting but why would you ever need to do this?

    • @Supershadow301
      @Supershadow301 4 года назад +1

      Well obviously, it's for your next RLCraft quest-based adventure map.

    • @CastFromHitPoints
      @CastFromHitPoints 3 года назад +1

      I know I'm (really) late, but civilizations grow to exploit these natural resources. So, to answer the question: To know where to put the mining towns.

  • @junolee8826
    @junolee8826 4 года назад

    aahh thanks for this!! ive been wondering a little about my world's geology recently :) ive got a couple ideas already but this is gonna be super helpful in adding more depth

  • @AzGael
    @AzGael 4 года назад +1

    thanks a lot, had doubts about this part for a while!

  • @globaros6629
    @globaros6629 4 года назад +4

    Different speeds compared:
    Speed of sound: 343 m/s
    Speed of electricity: 2 300 000 m/s
    Speed of light: 299 792 458 m/s
    Speed of my click when I see a new Artifexian video: 301 285 089 m/s

  • @Servo_M
    @Servo_M 4 года назад +4

    God: Makes a planet.
    Me: WHY IS THIS SO COMPLICATED!?!
    God: Because you're not God.

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel 3 года назад

      Artifexian might be God . . .

    • @Void_Dweller7
      @Void_Dweller7 2 года назад

      Religious bs.

  • @wstevegaming593
    @wstevegaming593 4 года назад +1

    I was literally searching for info on this last month, thanks!!

  • @Kazen169
    @Kazen169 2 года назад

    I love this! thank you for sharing this with us!!

  • @ccvcharger
    @ccvcharger 2 года назад

    I love how these videos always bring up a detail that I never would have thought to consider on my own, and then forever stall out my process of world building as I rush to integrate the new things I learned and progressively forget what my original vision for the world actually was.

  • @GriffinMuffin
    @GriffinMuffin 3 года назад

    THIS IS THE VIDEO I'VE BEEN NEEDING FOR 3 MONTHS THANK YOU SO MUCH!

  • @miraqen7801
    @miraqen7801 2 года назад

    These are super useful for world-building! Thanks so much for the great content, my friend!

  • @gliese832c
    @gliese832c 2 года назад +2

    I know I'm late, but this is honestly one of my favorite videos on this channel! I wish we could get more of this, maybe a more in-depth explanation of more and different types of minerals, as well as various niche metals and minerals (where the hell would zirconium or tantalum appear?).

  • @eternalsoul4
    @eternalsoul4 2 года назад

    That video helped me so much! Thx it's now my bible on the subject.

  • @ironfoot9745
    @ironfoot9745 2 года назад

    omg thank you my dude! your a help to all dm's everywhere

  • @TheBlackEventorizon
    @TheBlackEventorizon 3 года назад

    My brain at the end of this video - Done!
    But seriously! This is facinating and really useful! Thank you!!

  • @JJ55X4201
    @JJ55X4201 4 года назад

    I was a lousy world builder before your videos, thanks for all the amazing information!

  • @patrickardagh-walter6609
    @patrickardagh-walter6609 4 года назад +1

    This is perfect timing, just starting a resource map for a new setting!

  • @arandompig3997
    @arandompig3997 4 года назад

    Well this is great! I've been searching things to do exactly what this video says for more than 7 months, and now I found this!

  • @marionforge2769
    @marionforge2769 4 года назад

    You're a help for world builders. You've got a new subscriber😁

  • @darandomator4010
    @darandomator4010 2 года назад

    Thank you, I will be making use of this.

  • @Bambochutafreak
    @Bambochutafreak 2 года назад

    This Video is underrated and deserves a lot more views. Very well done!

  • @thetalantonx
    @thetalantonx 2 года назад

    That was friggin' brilliant. Thank you!

  • @simulanger
    @simulanger 4 года назад +1

    Nice! I've been waiting for a good worldbuilding talk about minerals.

  • @kalez238
    @kalez238 4 года назад

    So happy for some more worldbuilding videos! Very cool information :D Might have to change a setting or two in my series that involved mining, now.

  • @2MeterLP
    @2MeterLP 2 года назад

    I have no plans to create a fantasy world, but it was facinating to learn about ores and how they form, especially with these well-made animations.

  • @avo478
    @avo478 4 года назад +1

    I started watching this before bed hoping it'd help me sleep. Failed, great video for learning this and not falling asleep, but bad video at helping fall asleep. Geology / 10

  • @ToxicMothBoi
    @ToxicMothBoi 2 года назад

    I thought yoi'd actualy talk about what the title says haha! Tricked me into learning something new. Thanks for making me learn stuff without me even really noticing😂

  • @Gcrusher-wz3le
    @Gcrusher-wz3le 3 года назад +1

    You, sir, have some quality animations and graphics. It's somewhat astounding, especially considering that there are much bigger channels dedicated to exactly this form of presentation with arguably lower quality details.

  • @orktv4673
    @orktv4673 2 года назад

    I am learning so much about fantasy worlds today.

  • @Artinthedark83
    @Artinthedark83 2 года назад

    WOW, thank you for all the information

  • @JamesGree
    @JamesGree 2 года назад +1

    This was an absolutely fantastic video and I enjoyed it very much! I always love it when fantasy worlds put this amount of thought into their geography. While having some very good pointers, there's two other forms of ore deposits that I think were missed in this video (and I'm sure others as well, but there's no need to be over specific). I apologize if I have gotten that wrong and just missed you mentioning it in the video. (Also I'm aware this is an older video and I'm a bit late to the party, sorry.)
    The first is the kind of mineralization associated with magma intruding into the crust to form plutons. A large mass of plutons greater than 40 square kilometers is called a Batholith. Large quantities of mineralization generally form from hydrothermal fluids percolating through the surrounding rocks and depositing minerals such as Copper, Tin, Tungsten, Lithium, Iron, Arsenic, Wolframite (Containing Iron, Tungsten and Manganese), Lead and Zinc. Small concentrations of Silver and Uranium can also be formed during later phases of mineralization. The best example I can give is the "Cornubian Batholith" and it's associated mineralization. This is quite similar to the volcanism associated mineralization that you mentioned in this video, but often occurs under ancient eroded mountain chains where you get granite at the surface, forming moors. You wouldn't mine the minerals from the granite itself, but instead the heavily mineralized contact metamorphic rocks just adjacent to the granite plutons.
    The second are the "Banded Iron Formations". These were formed across the globe in areas of Precambrian crust and were thought to be associated the oxygenation of the earth's oceans bringing the iron ions in the ocean out of solution and depositing them as gigantic bands of iron oxides. Most formations in our world can be found in Australia, Brazil, Canada, India, Russia, South Africa, Ukraine, and the United States.
    If anyone does want to use this information from my comment, I highly encourage you to go and do some additional research on the "Cornubian Batholith", "Batholith Formation", "Batholith Mineralization" and "Banded Iron Formations", as there is a lot of nuance that I will have missed, and likely some incorrect information in my post.

  • @quadconjures
    @quadconjures 4 года назад

    very interesting video, imposes some daunting questions about worldbuilding

  • @hope_13alt
    @hope_13alt 4 года назад +1

    Great! I've been looking forward to a video like this.

  • @AB-gh5be
    @AB-gh5be 2 года назад

    been trying to figure out where to place a silver mine for AGES, thank you so much!

  • @Swamp_Hound
    @Swamp_Hound 2 года назад

    this video, aside from the interesting natural systems and the amount of detail they inform, is so invaluable as I began world-building not long ago. instant subscribe. thank you so much!

  • @sagacious03
    @sagacious03 4 года назад +1

    Interesting! Thanks for uploading!

  • @tails183
    @tails183 4 года назад +1

    I've had one of my DnD players ask a couple times about mining for resources, but have turned him down because I knew next-to-nothing about where they'd actually generate. This could come in handy.

    • @jeromefournier9667
      @jeromefournier9667 4 года назад

      If you are using the premade DnD world then most of them are not "evolved" they are divinely crafted, in the case the will of those gods (probably every ore in the mountains and hills) is more important than natural placement, and even if it's a mostly natural world it might not be old enough for oil/coal to appear naturally.

  • @Bixbeat
    @Bixbeat 2 года назад

    I appreciate the quick introduction! It might have helped if we get an introduction to the lay of the land and their historic movement before introducing the minerals. I found myself having to check back to figure out how areas have developed over time, making it harder to understand in one sitting.

  • @OmegaTaishu
    @OmegaTaishu 4 года назад

    Thank you for this vid.
    I've always wondered how to distribute these resources in my conworlds.

  • @JeaHSaren
    @JeaHSaren 2 года назад

    I learned way more than I expected to learn in this video, and yet not what I expected to learn at all. I assumed this was going to be "What types of ore you might expect to see in worlds where magic exists" or "...in worlds with different pressure" or something like that, but I still learned a lot, so I appreciate the video!

  • @thephoenixempyre2300
    @thephoenixempyre2300 3 года назад

    I think this was the first Artifexian video I watched, and coming back, I can easily say that my coming to this channel was not a disappointment