I Hiked 14 Miles to Collect This Orange Dirt

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  • čas přidán 2. 06. 2024
  • Huge thank you to Upstart for sponsoring today's episode! Don’t wait and check your rate today at www.upstart.com/EVERYTHING
    While visiting Utah, I had the opportunity to collect a resource that I've been trying to find for the longest time. This specific dirt was a historical key to unlocking the industrial age. Let's see if I'm able to turn this dirt into steel. Check it out!
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Komentáře • 637

  • @htme
    @htme  Před rokem +69

    Thanks again to Upstart for sponsoring today's episode! Don’t wait and check your rate today at www.upstart.com/EVERYTHING

    • @craigscott2315
      @craigscott2315 Před rokem

      scotch is actually irish, laphroaig is a single malt scotish whiskey. If you run the stream of molten metal into a long depression that is how damascus steal is still made in india.

    • @thekak2627
      @thekak2627 Před rokem +1

      No, you need to build a boat and make a colony before you can industrialized man

    • @caseyhaywardfoxington5324
      @caseyhaywardfoxington5324 Před rokem

      hey ive been wondering for abint now and i know your far frar to busy right now with recovering from the ... demon attack on your estate .... but would you at some point be willing to help me with game development stuff alot of your primitive projects are stuff id love to ad in games for realism sake liek th smelting and stuff the potery all of it would be awsome to incorprate but only when your ready and have teh time im also trying to get other people together in my game devlopment currently were only throwing ideas together no coding or designing yet aside from art here and there

    • @crazyworldcreativepassions7754
      @crazyworldcreativepassions7754 Před rokem

      I’m sorry but hot metal looks like forbidden orange juice 😂😂

    • @martinjlopez87
      @martinjlopez87 Před rokem +1

      Why didn’t you mention Cody?

  • @graefx
    @graefx Před rokem +689

    I remember primitive technology finding a little bit of bog iron but I had no idea you could have such large deposits. This definitely feels like the epiphany missing link on the evolution of forging that I never knew about.

    • @Shad0wBoxxer
      @Shad0wBoxxer Před rokem +16

      Same!

    • @Shad0wBoxxer
      @Shad0wBoxxer Před rokem +33

      @@tripplefives1402 cool story bro, but this here is the missing link for steal and iron for some of is. We know about aluminum from all the other shows but this is the first time in 30 years ive heard of bog ifon

    • @jb13611
      @jb13611 Před rokem +21

      @@Shad0wBoxxer And this is the first time I'm hearing about finding aluminum

    • @rivitraven
      @rivitraven Před rokem +15

      Even better is that bog iron often replenishes very fast because it's made from bacteria that poop it out.

    • @jebowlin3879
      @jebowlin3879 Před rokem +2

      Ive learned so much on this channel

  • @valbourne1797
    @valbourne1797 Před rokem +228

    You really get to see why some cultures have like an iron festival so to speak. Its like a BBQ but for whole village to make the iron they need for plows and cookware. The people taking turns tending the bellows, family members coming in and out with water and lunch, the master smelter overseeing and of course the anticipation of the result. It could really turn into the core of a social event.

    • @justwastingtimeonyt9952
      @justwastingtimeonyt9952 Před rokem +8

      Good comment

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Před rokem +9

      Yes! The whole time I was thinking it’s a lot for a few people, but for a community to help with a few times a year (or once with good planning), it’s not hard to see how an entire community got the necessities of life done pretty well even back then. You just need the right balance of socialising, fun, drinking (?) etc.

    • @_GOD_HAND_
      @_GOD_HAND_ Před rokem +1

      @@Gogglesofkrome No, ancient Scandinavian swords (made from bog iron) were universally inferior to swords produced in the European mainland. The famed Ulfberht swords produced by the Franks in the Rhineland were made with steel imported from Central Asia.

    • @trollmcclure1884
      @trollmcclure1884 Před rokem

      yes, plows and cookware to grow and make alcohol

  • @Nighthawkinlight
    @Nighthawkinlight Před rokem +378

    This video was a step above. Nice job. One note about the steel vs iron thing at the end: I learned when doing a related video that (despite what we were all told in grade school) steel is not made by adding carbon to iron. The process to make iron as you've seen adds carbon in extreme excess, and to make steel you have to take most of it away. Raw pig iron has 3.5-4.5% carbon content, and cast iron around 3%. Steel is typically between 0.5 and 2% carbon content.
    So, you did make iron there at the end. That is, you made what is called iron colloquially and industrially, which is not strictly pure elemental iron.

    • @riuphane
      @riuphane Před rokem +7

      I was wondering about that, having followed some of you dabbling, thanks for sharing

    • @sherannaidoo2712
      @sherannaidoo2712 Před rokem +12

      Pure elemental iron is extremely difficult to isolate because of irons reactivity. At best you will achieve 98% pure material and even that will react with oxygen and moisture resulting in oxides and hydroxides.

    • @betabenja
      @betabenja Před rokem

      fight! fight! fight! fight!

    • @derrickthewhite1
      @derrickthewhite1 Před rokem +15

      expanding on iron vs. steel, when the alloy is less than 0.5% carbon, it becomes wrought iron: easy to work with, but a little soft. I think wrought iron is what you typically get when you work the iron in the forge too much. So in order of increasing carbon content its wrought Iron -> steel -> cast iron. Steel has the flexibility of wrought iron and the hard toughness of cast iron. But cast iron and wrought iron are easier to make.

    • @TimeSurfer206
      @TimeSurfer206 Před rokem +5

      @@sherannaidoo2712 Yup. The process for making Elemental Iron is actually Electrolytic Refining, in a sealed environment.

  • @Rosiepedia
    @Rosiepedia Před rokem +324

    This was so cool. Everything you’ve made is primitive or early but there was something so vicerally primitive about the three forgers sledgehammering a flaming chunk of bloom on a burning tree stump… incredible

    • @appo1860
      @appo1860 Před rokem +11

      I know right, it's almost just like it used to be back then

    • @phillipjohn4800
      @phillipjohn4800 Před rokem +9

      I saw that and thought, dudes rock

    • @nilo70
      @nilo70 Před rokem +2

      DAWN OF TIME

    • @YounesLayachi
      @YounesLayachi Před rokem

      Favourite part too 😅

  • @theirontitan
    @theirontitan Před rokem +99

    next project. Crucible steel. You take the bloomery iron, toss in a small amount of glass, Flux, and some charcoal into a ceramic crucible. Air seal it with a clay Cao, and run it at melting temperature for 6-8 hours. Let it cool for a day or two, then break it open. If the charcoal is still there, you did it right. Using that process, you should get a very clean puck of pure steel.

  • @zalseon4746
    @zalseon4746 Před rokem +37

    it's so inspiring watching you guys recover from the loss of that fire. Had your own bronze age collapse, and now you're gearing up to hit the iron age in full force.

  • @Tremori_A
    @Tremori_A Před rokem +100

    Man I remember when you were such a small creator. Making your first videos. I didn't watch all of it but I'm Glad your still doing the thing

  • @jaukeweterings6611
    @jaukeweterings6611 Před rokem +97

    The hammering process was presented phenomenally, really felt like I was watching the ancient process!

    • @ironhead2008
      @ironhead2008 Před rokem +4

      I think I saw a video on Japanese Swordsmithing where the Iron extracted from the forge was processed in a damn near identical way, the main difference being the Master manipulating the bloom with tongs while the apprentices hammered on it.

    • @KainYusanagi
      @KainYusanagi Před rokem +5

      @@ironhead2008 That's because they use iron sand, which is basically the same as the bog dirt!

    • @F_L_U_X
      @F_L_U_X Před rokem +5

      Like he said, the Wendy's bag really transports you into the medieval times...

  • @5thearth
    @5thearth Před rokem +45

    The process of roasting the ore before smelting has a close link to art. Many pigments are variations of iron oxides. Yellow/Red Ochre, Sienna, Umber, and Mars Black are all various iron oxides. Sienna and Umber come in "raw" and "burnt" forms, which have literally the same starting materials. The "burnt" versions have been roasted at high heat, driving off chemically bound water molecules and producing a color change just like the ore in this video.

    • @krzysztofbroda5376
      @krzysztofbroda5376 Před rokem +1

      They probably figured out iron smelting from adding iron glazes onto pots

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 Před měsícem

      The water isn't chemically bound, it is trapped within the structure of the crystals so it's physically bound.

  • @demolisherman1763
    @demolisherman1763 Před rokem +159

    Man I see why Iron used to be a rich man’s metal, such an arduous and time consuming job.

    • @SaitoGray
      @SaitoGray Před rokem +20

      Like everything before the industrial revolution.

    • @charleslambert3368
      @charleslambert3368 Před rokem +13

      And this video doesn't show all the work that went into cutting down trees and making charcoal.

    • @GAMER123GAMING
      @GAMER123GAMING Před rokem +2

      The iron age disagrees with this comment

    • @barredok
      @barredok Před rokem

      @@charleslambert3368 two to three weeks of 24 hour care with the charcoal makers tending the charcoal pit. With no sleep to produce a fifth the total of mass of wood into charcoal.

    • @delphicdescant
      @delphicdescant Před rokem +3

      @@GAMER123GAMING The iron age, AKA the age where the rich had iron.

  • @Arkios64
    @Arkios64 Před rokem +18

    "If you're going to do it Primitive, bog iron is the way to go!" Yeah, I remember there being some guy in the woods, something Technology, doing that way back; didn't he just begin that journey anew in the latest video?
    Also, what a joyous feeling to be able to say "the latest Primitive technology video" and it being from the current year!

  • @thexalon
    @thexalon Před rokem +12

    I was looking at a century-old map of where I live now. The area right around my home was labelled "Iron Bog". Well, I know what I need to do ...

  • @lemmonsinmyeyes
    @lemmonsinmyeyes Před rokem +10

    'we didn't make iron' *aww man, not agian* 'WE MADE STEEL!' *WOOOOO*

  • @Crowdle
    @Crowdle Před rokem +15

    Honestly a bloom party sounds an all around great time

  • @oao8472
    @oao8472 Před rokem +9

    Nobody:
    Andy: I've got a jar of dirt! I've got a jar of dirt!

  • @Mireaze
    @Mireaze Před rokem +7

    Damn, adri going ham on that bloom. It didn't stand a chance

  • @rodrigomothe13
    @rodrigomothe13 Před rokem +16

    Great video! On a side note: that's not steel, too much carbon concentration. That's called pig iron, or crude iron

    • @marscraft4228
      @marscraft4228 Před rokem +6

      Thank you! What we ended up with is a mix of iron, steel, and close to cast iron in places. But the majority is mid to high carbon steel. I'll be running it through a fining hearth to homogenize the material into something more cooperative in an upcoming video.

  • @fseperent
    @fseperent Před rokem +4

    Quick question for glass workers: would that slag be useful for Andy to learn glass craft, assuming he can make a furnace hot enough to work glass with?

  • @rappyrap2819
    @rappyrap2819 Před rokem +15

    Gosh I have seen multiple blooms on the internet before but never one that nice! It was high carbon but honestly that just means you did it well, you can remove as much carbon as you need! It really goes to show how important high quality ore is. It kind of sucks how hard it is to source it but at least bog iron gives us a chance, unlike other ores that large companies can take over.

  • @TheClearwall
    @TheClearwall Před rokem +95

    It's really interesting how easy it is to go PAST iron and into steel. Kind of makes one wonder why there was an "Iron Age" for so long before steel took over

    • @therandomguy1315
      @therandomguy1315 Před rokem +69

      iron and steel have always gone hand in hand but getting an iron bloom is more useful than a steel one due to the amount of effort refining a steel one takes compared to an iron one because its harder

    • @danilooliveira6580
      @danilooliveira6580 Před rokem +85

      because the "iron age" was more like steel age, pure iron tools are actually not very useful (though apparently they were thing). but the "iron age" also include the use of steel. "steel age" is actually not a real age, its what some people call when people started to manipulate the carbon content of steel with extreme precision the point where they could mass produce steel with precise properties.

    • @gavind351
      @gavind351 Před rokem +26

      It's called the Iron Age because it's when humanity started to manipulate iron into different materials. Steel is one of those.
      Back then, it was hard to get a consistent carbon content. It was until the industrial revolution and the Bessemer Process we got higher carbon steel more reliably.

    • @ericwilner1403
      @ericwilner1403 Před rokem +18

      Thing is: metallurgical iron isn't the same thing as chemical iron.
      Cast iron is elemental iron plus way too much carbon to be steel. Remove most of the carbon, and you have carbon steel. Remove all of the iron (and the other impurities), and you have what a chemist would call iron, i.e., the actual element.
      It's a funny old language, and the meaning of words often depend on the context.

    • @dj1NM3
      @dj1NM3 Před rokem +8

      I would hazard a cautious guess that most items listed as "iron" (unless definitely cast iron, but that's not pure elemental iron) in museums are actully made from at least a low-grade steel containing some carbon, because completely taking all the impurities out of naturally ocurring iron is really almost impossible, at least until the technology of the Henry Bessemer's converter in 1856.

  • @HipposHateWater
    @HipposHateWater Před rokem +1

    I like how you guys include a lot of what most other creators would leave on the cutting-room floor (whether personal or environmental gaffs). It really helps to paint the picture of the hardships you went through to source these materials, and gives a better idea of what our ancestors would've taken for granted as just another part of the process "back in the day".

  • @logicisuseful
    @logicisuseful Před rokem +1

    I really enjoy watching the videos like this because they answer the overall question of reset in the best negative way possible: no, one person could not reinvent everything from scratch, because so much of this stuff is so simultaneously labor intensive and time sensitive that one person couldn’t do it all in the allotted time frames. They’re all community efforts.

  • @robertmason9737
    @robertmason9737 Před rokem +4

    This video is really cool! Primitive Technology did a similar thing where he collected water logged soil from a creek that contained iron bacteria, combined it with charcoal and dried clay and smelted it in his kiln. In the end, he only retrieved a handful of iron prills but the experiment worked out very well.

  • @Muxy8088
    @Muxy8088 Před rokem +1

    OMG, you guys are the poster child for hiking in the wild without any proper equipment (boots maybe??), and getting stuck and needing rescue. So glad that did not happen. Please take care!

  • @elbowache
    @elbowache Před rokem +3

    I'm from Southern New Jersey. The first major industry here was bog iron. The water here is so iron rich it stains your skin when you swim in it.

  • @dakotagear8439
    @dakotagear8439 Před rokem +4

    In Western Australia raw iron ore is in such abundance you can see it in large patches on the ground in small grain form.
    Once I got a magnet and waved it above the patch to see what would happen, it was pure enough to attach to the magnet

    • @nothinggrand3805
      @nothinggrand3805 Před rokem

      Iron is everywhere here in Australia. I can just go out the back and find tiny rocks that contain iron.

    • @lorrainemunoa791
      @lorrainemunoa791 Před rokem +1

      One reason parts of Utah and much of the Australian continent have that same look in common- that deep red rock!

    • @rascal6112
      @rascal6112 Před rokem

      Also from WA! I was gonna comment how it seems so strange to cross state lines and go on such a trek when red dirt is just everywhere here, but I guess that's why we've got so many mines for iron while America has got like coal mines

  • @Jacob_graber
    @Jacob_graber Před rokem +2

    When the big bloom chunk started deforming instead of crumbling, I got so excited! That's a ton of iron!

  • @bertilhatt
    @bertilhatt Před rokem +1

    This is incredible. I love recognising people that you’ve worked with before helping you find ore, congregating around the fire and tiring to turn a hellish mass into something useful. A lot about the terrifying reputation of forges and blacksmiths makes a lot more sense now.

  • @TheWretchedOwl
    @TheWretchedOwl Před rokem +3

    It’s crazy how much silica slag just comes out of there. Is there any project silica is good for? I mean you’ve got so much of it now 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @marscraft4228
      @marscraft4228 Před rokem

      I saved all of the slag from this smelt as it still contains a fair amount of iron. I'll then add it to a future smelt to extract it further!

  • @GoodandBasic
    @GoodandBasic Před rokem +18

    😆 This was an amazing adventure!

  • @AbananaPEEl
    @AbananaPEEl Před rokem +1

    I saw Good and Basic and Utah mountains and had to re-check the date this was released. I was confused because the beginning felt like I had already seen this video! But then you finally showed them with Cody from CodysLab and thaaats when I realized where i've seen this iron ore before!

    • @Zaliant
      @Zaliant Před rokem

      do you remember what range this is in? almost looks like the southern wasatch

  • @Viper00900
    @Viper00900 Před rokem +10

    I've watched this channel for a while, I enjoy the content and the way they explain things! They are also not afraid to ask for help, thanks so much for this, I'm sure to enjoy many, many more hours of this!

  • @brunoethier896
    @brunoethier896 Před rokem +14

    According to the book "Collapse" by Jared Diamond, bog iron production used so much charcoal that the norse ended up deforesting Iceland. The initial forests were simply far too slow to repopulate.

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 Před měsícem +1

      That sounds wrong to me, Iceland doesn't exactly have a lot of bogs, they're mostly found in Southern Scandinavia. Also all iron production requires charcoal, not just bog iron, it was only with the invention of refractory furnances that coal started being used.

  • @CrypidLore
    @CrypidLore Před rokem +2

    Impressive, but what's even more impressive? That your grandparents made the same hike uphill both ways while it was hailing half dollar sized hail.

  • @SentinalSlice
    @SentinalSlice Před rokem +2

    Loved the slag liquid. It looked so cool.

  • @pirateskeleton7828
    @pirateskeleton7828 Před rokem +3

    Can't wait for some hiker to find your dig site and get spooked by it, since they lack all context to what the holes were for. Good job though, trekking for 7 miles isn't easy, and doesn't get any easier when you have to trudge back with cargo.

  • @TheLonelyBrit
    @TheLonelyBrit Před rokem +4

    Watching the slah flownout of the furnace was so cool.

    • @OmniversalInsect
      @OmniversalInsect Před rokem +1

      At first I thought it was iron being wasted lol

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 Před měsícem

      Looked like the one cool scene in The Hobbit movies.

  • @mihael5722
    @mihael5722 Před rokem +4

    I think this may be one of the coolest of your videos yet! It looked like it was straight out of a RenFest watching that smelt, and now I want to go bog-iron hunting!

  • @tantamounted
    @tantamounted Před rokem

    8:58 - 9:05 "Justice is love out loud" - I love that shirt

  • @DanielGBenesScienceShows

    This whole production and the effort that went into it was awesome! Seeing the liquid glass pour out that thing like an industrial furnace was amazing and not what I was expecting!

  • @ianshreves1130
    @ianshreves1130 Před rokem +6

    It's always fun to watch these videos. I always learn so much

  • @alexiusdevium9708
    @alexiusdevium9708 Před rokem

    This is just about the coolest I have seen in a long time, the hammering team work and the absolute beauty of the slag tapping, all from mountain dirt!

  • @XplosivCookie
    @XplosivCookie Před rokem

    Joe and Adrian outside working that hunk of steel was such a nice shot, not even really introduced into the video because they're just part of the community now.
    Inventions and innovations are nice but they'd get us nowhere without some good old fashioned teamwork, with specialists in each field c:

  • @zanekovac726
    @zanekovac726 Před rokem +3

    This is amazing, it really shows how complicated it is to make something as simple as steel.

  • @Stillpoint23
    @Stillpoint23 Před rokem

    I frickin love this channel! Out of the zillions of channels im sub'd to, yours is miles ahead of my second favourite :)
    Yall rock!

  • @saitodgrafico
    @saitodgrafico Před rokem

    Awesome video, I didn´t know that method for collecting ore, it´s so primitive but also a good way for ancient people to find a large supply of high carbon steel. I really love this channel.

  • @alaskanwolf
    @alaskanwolf Před rokem +4

    I was so happy when you didn't try to smelt with Good and Basic again. They seem like nice enough guys but to actually have somebody that knows what they are doing with smelting... it is nice to finally walk away with a success.

  • @silasbolle3416
    @silasbolle3416 Před rokem

    I really liked this video format. Keep going 💪🏻

  • @Hilqy
    @Hilqy Před rokem +3

    would be cool to find some of this in my local bogs, definitely going to look for some when i next go hiking

  • @calebrp02
    @calebrp02 Před rokem

    One of my favorite episodes, great work guys!

  • @ecospider5
    @ecospider5 Před rokem

    One of the coolest videos you have done. Really exciting to see iron and steel come out of red dirt.

  • @bl4cksp1d3r
    @bl4cksp1d3r Před rokem

    That was entertaining AND educating, loved it

  • @arnaldoalegria2209
    @arnaldoalegria2209 Před rokem

    This was so educative!!

  • @ExpendableOne23
    @ExpendableOne23 Před rokem

    Very cool vid. Always love the content!

  • @razorsaber2287
    @razorsaber2287 Před rokem

    Exciting stuff!! That is a massive bloom!

  • @KittenoftheBroccoli
    @KittenoftheBroccoli Před rokem

    15:30 I like to imagine one of the neighbors peaking over the fence to see what all the racket was, only to find a gang of guys taking turns hammering on a glowing piece of metal while another guy films them.

  • @comfortablegrey
    @comfortablegrey Před rokem

    Solid goals, exciting things in the future!

  • @victorcast2467
    @victorcast2467 Před rokem

    What a great success! This was amazing!

  • @aaronyoung8301
    @aaronyoung8301 Před rokem +1

    Consolidating that into a useable billet is going to be a fun time. I've looked into that process and it's a lot of cutting and folding and/or stacking and [forge] welding.
    Don't be surprised your arms get tired near the end from all the hammering.
    Remember to Swing with more of the shoulder than the elbow, aim small miss small, and eat loads of protein when you can; you'll need every bit of effort with that.

  • @unit4735
    @unit4735 Před rokem

    This was absolutely the coolest video from the teamwork to the primitive knowledge it’s just awesome

  • @benlawrence4732
    @benlawrence4732 Před rokem

    Can i just say thank you for adding the sponsor timer, what a thoughtful addition you lovely minnesotan man!

  • @Travelling..Bottle..Digger

    This was very interesting. looked like a fun trip and explore. Thanks for sharing👍⛏

  • @nickg5250
    @nickg5250 Před rokem

    Outstanding vid as always. Glad you bounced back from the fire.

  • @jamesh5460
    @jamesh5460 Před rokem

    This channel is a very cool way to learn history and historical methods. Love it.

  • @JohnFleshman
    @JohnFleshman Před rokem

    Love the science lesson! Thanks!

  • @knite_lite
    @knite_lite Před rokem

    I really liked this video. Having the very obvious success was a very satisfying thing to watch 👍

  • @ericepperson8409
    @ericepperson8409 Před rokem

    Oh man. Hiking up a mountain in spring in Jeans and a hoodie. True dedication right there.

  • @therealestatewhisperer4806

    Great content again!!

  • @auricia201
    @auricia201 Před rokem

    Looking forward to the video about different iron alloys! 😃

  • @chrisb8154
    @chrisb8154 Před rokem

    Great to see you with Good & Basic. You guys share a lot of the same interests and should collab more!

  • @robbicu
    @robbicu Před rokem

    Cool to see Adrian helping out, too!

  • @Dylan-fc6mr
    @Dylan-fc6mr Před rokem

    This was an incredible video!!

  • @Kethra430
    @Kethra430 Před rokem

    Okay learning about the iron bog thing was awesome

  • @F_L_U_X
    @F_L_U_X Před rokem +1

    I haven't watched the entire video yet, just saw the intro. I've been asking where Nate is on the TKOR videos! And awesome, you met up with Cody's Lab too!

  • @thelastsmith
    @thelastsmith Před rokem +1

    I've been watching for some time and this is honestly a really nice episode

    • @thelastsmith
      @thelastsmith Před rokem

      OMG ty for seeing me HTME I've been here since the dark ages XD jkjk

  • @walterashley149
    @walterashley149 Před rokem

    My old yard in Traphill, NC in the smoky mountains was pretty much all FE203, and so was all of my clothing!!!
    Granite mountains and red clay ;)

  • @matthewmccalister5594

    That was flipping amazing! I was NOT expecting that much metal to come out of that dirt. That blows my mind how it is naturally produced...

  • @FullmetalAngyl
    @FullmetalAngyl Před rokem +1

    "We've accidentally made steel."
    I was not expecting that!
    Honestly I was not expecting most of what was demonstrated. This is an amazing and educational video!

    • @rolfbjorn9937
      @rolfbjorn9937 Před rokem +1

      This is not steel, this is so high in carbon that it's beyond cast iron. Cast iron has more carbon than carbon steel, ironically.

    • @FullmetalAngyl
      @FullmetalAngyl Před rokem

      @@rolfbjorn9937 Ah. I was quoting them.

    • @rolfbjorn9937
      @rolfbjorn9937 Před rokem

      @@FullmetalAngyl Well, Yesterday Me is technically not 100% right, I just had a breakfast illumination, there's a term for it, it's a bloom or bloomery iron. See, High Carbon Steel is...way under 2% where cast iron is beyond 4%. Their bloom seems to be in the past 4-5% and obviously all blooms need further work to turn into either wrought iron or steel.

  • @Gerald.69
    @Gerald.69 Před rokem

    Huge amount of old mines, bog iron, and ore all over railroads and tailings dumped in parkinglots at beaches are everywhere in the ADK's. especially by the vt bridge in port henry

  • @audible_
    @audible_ Před rokem

    Wow I love these videos so much I'm 12 but I've learned so much off these videos that I didn't even know about and it's so cool to see someone live off there own stuff as much as they can it's so cool

  • @andrewcoburn5060
    @andrewcoburn5060 Před rokem

    Hey that long walk gives you an idea of what it took to gather the resources like they did back then. Love the videos I’ve watched almost every one besides the food ones.

  • @thelukesternater
    @thelukesternater Před rokem +1

    That’s a wild Cody!

  • @Tr1Hard777
    @Tr1Hard777 Před rokem +1

    The amount of time and effort needed to make just one sword is crazy. I heard a story of knives being so scarce that they traded slaves for knives.

  • @lightzephyr3399
    @lightzephyr3399 Před rokem

    Wow, nice smelt! Good job!

  • @christopherrogers303
    @christopherrogers303 Před rokem

    You should visit the Old Irontown ruins near Newcastle Utah. There are the remains of large charcoal kilns made in the late 1800s to produce charcoal by tons, a blast furnace, a few other things I can't think of off the top of my head, and you can see the old open pit mines on the side of the mountains there. There is so much of that rust dirt in the area you can see whole mountainsides with the color. It's one of the richest reserves of iron in the country that has been largely untapped for some reason.

  • @JahBreed
    @JahBreed Před rokem +2

    Wow. I wish I'd known all this in my 20's. You kids are so lucky. There's so much left out there. I'm not telling where but......🤣

  • @matthewk9563
    @matthewk9563 Před rokem

    Really cool. Amazed that I had never heard of Bog Iron before!

  • @mar117117
    @mar117117 Před rokem

    One of the best episodes so far. I'm excited where it leads to.

  • @chrisgenovese8188
    @chrisgenovese8188 Před rokem

    man, seeing that bloom getting pulled out was a thrill! congrats on leveling up!

  • @Nebulorum
    @Nebulorum Před rokem +13

    I want to see lathes for metal, going to the age of precision.

  • @alanmoffat4680
    @alanmoffat4680 Před rokem

    HTME has the luxury of modern knowledge of metallurgy. They use ancient techniques to make iron from known ores. Just how many trials and errors the ancients had to go through to develop iron production boggles my mind. I know that iron meteorites were refined into metal objects, but the iron was ready for manufacture. I marvel at the resourcefulness of the originators of iron production.

  • @SevenDeMagnus
    @SevenDeMagnus Před rokem

    Coolness, to the very high level.

  • @townsville69
    @townsville69 Před rokem

    Another fascinating vid.

  • @ShaggyMummy
    @ShaggyMummy Před rokem

    At a daycare that my uncle owned, and my mom worked at, I remember digging in the sand pit, and finding what we called "Tiger Sand" because it was orange and layered in with darker sand. I also remember finding iron fillings in the sand with a magnet toy. the owner also regularly had sand delivered in a huge pile, and we loved to climb and dig in it, until eventually they spread it out.
    I later came to the conclusion that the sand may have come from a local foundry, and had most of the iron filings pulled out with magnets, but some small (harmless) amounts were left.

  • @Joe___R
    @Joe___R Před rokem +1

    The old ways almost always require a good amount of hard work but that is what advanced society to what it is now. Welcome to the steel age. It will be fun to watch you keep advancing all the way into the silicon age that we are in currently.

    • @rivitraven
      @rivitraven Před rokem

      Correction, we are in the PLASTIC age.

  • @jimburnsjr.
    @jimburnsjr. Před rokem

    excellent video thank you

  • @bagel5085
    @bagel5085 Před rokem +1

    He didn't even mention Cody in the intro. Shots fired.

  • @Nono-hk3is
    @Nono-hk3is Před rokem

    That furnace is a thing of beauty.

  • @MisterTalkingMachine
    @MisterTalkingMachine Před rokem

    Yessssss ! god that was a long time coming, so happy to see it