
Smelting Bog Iron in a Bloomery Furnace — From Ore to Wrought Iron
The bloomery furnace is the technology that ended the Bronze Age. For the first time, humans could extract iron from ore using nothing but clay, charcoal, and forced air — no complex alloying, no tin trade routes, no casting molds. Iron ore is abundant nearly everywhere on Earth, and a bloomery can be built from local materials in a single day. This accessibility made iron the democratic metal — any village with clay, trees, and bog iron could produce tools and weapons.
The chemistry is elegantly simple: carbon monoxide from burning charcoal strips oxygen atoms from iron oxide, leaving behind metallic iron. But the process never reaches iron's melting point (1538°C) — the furnace operates at 1100-1300°C, producing a spongy mass called a 'bloom' that must be hammered to consolidate. This bloom iron, once forged, becomes wrought iron — tough, workable, and far more abundant than bronze ever was.
This blueprint uses bog iron ore (limonite nodules from wetlands), which was the primary iron source across Northern Europe, Scandinavia, and Japan for thousands of years. The complete process — from building the furnace to extracting and consolidating the bloom — takes a full day of intensive work.
Kandungan berbahaya
Blueprint ini mengandungi prosedur berbahaya. Log masuk dan aktifkan kandungan berbahaya dalam tetapan akaun anda untuk melihat arahan langkah demi langkah.
CC0 Domain Awam
Blueprint ini dikeluarkan di bawah CC0. Anda bebas menyalin, mengubah, mengedar, dan menggunakan karya ini untuk sebarang tujuan, tanpa meminta kebenaran.
Sokong Pembuat dengan membeli produk melalui Blueprint mereka di mana mereka memperoleh Komisen Pembuat ditetapkan oleh Penjual, atau cipta iterasi baru Blueprint ini dan sertakan ia sebagai sambungan dalam Blueprint anda sendiri untuk berkongsi hasil.