Minería

From Vintage Story Wiki
Revision as of 12:55, 7 March 2023 by Eleli (talk | contribs)


La Minería es una mecánica del juego que permite a los jugadores recolectar minerales para usarlos en varias mecánicas de fabricación, incluyendo fundición y herrería avanzadas para hacer Herramientas y Armas. Puedes recoger minerales y convertirlos en metal o mantenerlos tal cual como piedras preciosas.

Material necesario

Para empezar a minar, un jugador necesita dos herramientas especializadas, el pico y el pico de prospección. Un objeto opcional es una bolsa de minería, que tiene 10 ranuras de inventario disponibles y contiene minerales. Mientras que el pico es necesario para recoger piedra y minerales, el pico de prospección se utiliza para encontrarlos, pero no puede recoger minerales por sí mismo, ya que los bloques rotos por el pico no sueltan nada.

Obtención de minerales metálicos antes de la extracción

Aquí está el enigma. Las herramientas necesarias para la minería deben fabricarse con metal mediante fundición, ¡pero los materiales que los jugadores necesitan para crear herramientas de metal sólo pueden recolectarse cuando se usan herramientas de metal! Hay dos métodos disponibles para recolectar suficientes pepitas de mineral fundible (5 unidades de metal base) para crear un pico sin necesidad de minar.

Busqueda

Pequeñas piedras que contienen minerales aparecen en la superficie del mundo y son una buena fuente de pepitas de metal al principio del juego. Para recoger los depósitos superficiales, rompe las piedras que contienen mineral con la mano vacía o con cualquier objeto para convertir las piedras en pepitas de mineral fundibles y recogerlas en tu inventario. Estos pequeños depósitos superficiales son un indicador de yacimientos subterráneos más grandes. (Asegúrate de añadir un waypoint para marcar la localización para posteriores operaciones mineras.) A veces se pueden encontrar pepitas en vasijas agrietadas localizadas en ruinas.

Panning

Copper nuggets can also be obtained by panning. See the panning guide for more information.

Obtaining Metal Ores by Mining

When rock blocks are broken using a pickaxe, rock, small stones or ores contained in chunks of stone will be dropped. The challenge is in finding the ore-containing rocks. As of game version 1.9, certain ore types only spawn in certain rock types. To determine which ores can occur in a rock type, examine a block, hold shift + H, and the handbook will provide information about what ores can appear in that rock type. For more information about natural deposits and ore generation, see the Ore Deposits page.


Pickaxe-iron.png Protip:
Mining in a vertical shaft is more effective because ores exist in "disc" shaped deposits.
To find out at which height specific ores might spawn, check the Ore Deposits Page linked above.


Choosing a Location

There are two general methods used to choose a location "Exploration" and "Prospecting". These are not mutually exclusive and work very well when combined. Players can prospect to find a region with the desired ore, and then explore caves within that region to find exposed ore to mine.

Exploration (Random Method)

Explore the map to locate regions with rock types used in crafting (chalk, limestone) and rock types that are known to generate ores used in crafting tools, weapons, and metal items. Sometimes ores can be located by exploring caves with entrances exposed to the surface of the world. When exploring caves, it's a good idea to bring ladders to provide a way to climb up or down shafts, and lots of torches to light the cave and mark a path back out. The possibility for "Adventure" exists in every cave, so be ready to face great danger, but also to reap great rewards.

Caving Rewards

A benefit of exploring caves is that even if ores aren't present, players may locate underground ruins, which often contain treasures and materials that a player cannot acquire any other way. Static Translocators also exist in caves. These machines can be used to transport the player into uncharted regions of the world.

Caving Dangers

  • Locusts are a dangerous mob that spawns in caves and caverns.
  • Drifters that are tougher than those encountered on the surface also exist.
  • Drop shafts may extend for tens or hundreds of blocks in caverns, and players who fall into these cavernous pits have no chance of survival.
  • Lava exists at deeper levels underground and will burn players (and gear) if personally encountered!

Prospecting (Systematic Method)

Mining at locations marked by small surface deposits can be a good way to find ores, but not all ores in a region will spawn in surface stones. To find deeper ores, use the prospecting pick or "propick". Prospecting can be performed on the surface before choosing to mine in an area, and help players decide which regions are worthwhile to mine based on the ores present in the chunk.

Density Search Mode

This is the first mode of the propick, which is by default always enabled. It is a chance based search system with long range - specifically, it shows the chance for specific ores to be present in a searched chunk (32x32 blocks, but all the way from surface to mantle).

Prospecting Process

To prospect, a player must break 3 rock blocks in 'close' proximity to "sample" the area for ores. The prospecting pick can only be used on rock blocks. These blocks must be located a minimum of 3 blocks apart (blocks between samples) and a maximum of 16 blocks apart. It is possible to sample three blocks within a square, or in a line where the last sample is 8 blocks away from the first sample. Upon breaking the third valid sample block, displays the densities of all the ores in the chat window based on the chunk that the first of the three blocks prospected (broken) was located in.

  • Prospecting "Too Close": If a player breaks a block that is too close to another previously sampled block, the game dialog (displayed in the chat window) will repeat the request for that sample number. However, the game registers the faulty sample as a hit and begins the prospecting block count for the player's next hit from the last hit, which was the faulty sample. To take a new sample, players must prospect at least 3 blocks from the faulty sample block hit, even though the action did not count toward the prospecting total.
  • Prospecting "Too Far": If a block is prospected that is too far (over 16 blocks) from the initial sample, the game dialog (displayed in the chat window) will display a message stating that this sample is too distant to be used with previous samples taken. The game will convert this last block hit into a new starting sample. Thus when prospecting, if blocks are broken "too far away" from each other, the consequence is that a player must restart the process of sampling.

Prospecting Results

To interpret the information, one must understand that this tool does not detect the actual presence of ore blocks; but detects the chance that ores are present. The game uses randomly generated ore density maps whenever a chunk is generated. These determine the chance for ores to appear. Even if a player removed all the ores from a chunk, the prospecting reading would remain the same. Additionally, some ores are not detected by prospecting with this mode, like quartz or surface copper.

The display is based on the first of the three blocks broken. The game reads the chunk density map and displays the densities of all the ores in the chat window. These values reflect the potential density, not the actual ore.

From most to least dense the categories displayed are: Ultra High, Very High, High, Decent, Poor, Very Poor. This category is followed by a number in parentheses, given in parts per thousand or 'PPT' (per mille - note there are two zeros below the slash, ‰, as opposed to a normal percent sign, %, which has one zero below).

Different ores will display drastically different density descriptors for the same PPT ‰ reading (based on the rarity of the material). For instance:

  • Common ores such as Deep Copper, Coal, and Sulfur will have Very High densities at around 18‰; and Very Poor below 5‰
  • Rare ores such as diamond and emerald will have Very High densities at around 1.0‰ and Very Poor at 0.2‰

Prospecting for Ore Fields

Prospecting results should be similar for 4 chunks in an area because the ore densities are created from a density map generated with the world, at a resolution of approximately 32 blocks. The ore densities will tend to have a more concentrated 'center' and then decrease when moving towards the circumference. So when locating a low density reading of any desired ore, try taking other prospecting samples some distance away in other directions to find an area with a higher reading. With enough sampling, a player can locate the center of the ore field, which often span a great many chunks.

Note: The prospecting pick will not detect quartz, surface copper or rock salt (not to be confused with Halite, which does show up in this propick mode). The prospecting pick only detects ores above a certain threshold. Players will occasionally find ore deposits in a region when the prospecting pick did not indicate the ores are present. Such 'undetected' occurrences are very rare.

Node Search Mode

This is the second mode of the propick, which is by default not enabled, but can be enabled either at world creation or through a command in an already created world. It offers a short to medium range search for exact and actually available deposits in a specific place. Be aware however, using this mode will drain the tools durability considerably faster. Additionally, it also doesn't pick up on Halite - don't be too salty now :p

Activating Node Search Mode

The easiest way to access this second mode is certainly to enable it while creating a new world. You can do so in the advanced settings ("Customzie" button) - towards the end of the list, the option "ProPick Node Search Radius" lets you switch between disabled or, if you want to use it, for what size you want it to work. The radius you select here describes the size of the cubic search area, for instance the radius 4 equals a search area of 9x9x9 blocks, 729 blocks searched in total.

Radius 2 4 6 8
Search Size 25 729 2197 4913

If you have already created a world, you can use a simple command in chat to activate this modus - and set or change the radius. Simply type the following into the chat:

/worldConfig propickNodeSearchRadius [Radius]

Insert the radius you want to use and enter - the final command should not have any brackets. Please keep in mind that higher radius numbers might be hard on your computer and could potentially lead to freezes. Additionally, even going with in game considerations, knowing the ores in such a big search area might be just as helpful as doing a density search in the first place. Before you will be able to switch between the two modes using the F key, you will have to restart the game once.

Prospecting Process

Similar to the density search, you will have to break a stone block with the propick, however you will only have to break one block and will get the results immediately listed in the information tab of the chat. The readings will be shown for the search area, with the broken block as the centre.

Prospecting Results

You will only be informed about actually occurring deposits in the searched area. If there are no ores in the searched cubicle, the chat will display the "no ore node nearby" message. If any deposits are found, the amount of blocks containing that ore is displayed again in words rather than actual numbers.

Verified... trace amounts small amounts medium amounts large amounts very large amounts huge amounts
Amount 1-9 10-19 20-39 40-79 80-119 120+


Mining Products

Smeltable nuggets do not drop from rocks when mined. Instead, ores contained in chunks of stone will be dropped. When mining, inventory space is generally at a premium, and these chunks occupy less space than "smeltable nuggets". Ores within rock must be crushed with a hammer in the crafting grid to obtain smeltable nuggets. "Rich" chunks have a higher concentration of ore and will generate more nuggets when crushed, so be sure to create smithy storage containers to store the ores!

Video Tutorial - How to Use the Prospecting Pick

How to Use the Prospecting Pick
Video demonstrating usage of the Prospecting Pick

Video Tutorial - Ore Deposits

Ore Deposits in Vintage Story English Erz Verteilung in Vintage Story Deutsch

Obtaining Halite

You have basically 3 ways of acquiring halite, which is used to make Salt.

Trading

Buying from traders. Commodities traders sell it. Limited and costs gears, but easier to find and acquire.

Mining Sedimentary Rock Layers

A simple diagram of how halite spawns in sedimentary layers. The top of the dome will stick out above the bottommost sedimentary layer, so it can be most readily found via horizontal mining

You can use the prospecting pick to find Halite the same way you can find metal ore (see above)

If you are in an area with at least one sedimentary layer (except bauxite) use the main Prospecting Pick mode (Density Mode, being the only one that shows halite readings). If you find any halite readings, it might be an area prone to spawn a halite deposit known as a "Salt Dome". Find the area with the best readings and around, and go caving or making vertical tunnels until you are in the bottommost sedimentary rock layer, or in the first rock layer that's not sedimentary. Then, go making horizontal tunnels in that level, following the rock type you're in. Once you find a pink rock, that's it, eureka!

A salt dome starts at the sedimentary layer and goes down to mantle level. It has so much salt that you might share it with other people and never run out, if in Multiplayer. In Singleplayer, once you find it, you won't need to search for a second time.

Sedimentary rocks that might have domes: chalk, chert, claystone, conglomerate, limestone, sandstone, shale Halite doesn't spawn in bauxite layers, but check below bauxite rock layers to be sure there isn't other sedimentary rocks.

In Deserts

Deserts have an average temperature between 15°C and 40°C and "Rarely" or "Very Rare" rainfall.

They also frequently have cow skulls, hyenas or cactuses. Look below the dirt/gravel/sand; it is few layers of halite like 2 or 3 blocks below the dirt/gravel/sand, at most. The deposit might provide you several stacks, but it might run out pretty quickly. This is what is called a "Dry lake salt bed".

You won't have propick readings to guide you; spawning is random in deserts only.



Wiki Navigation
Vintage Story Guías[[::Category:Guides| ]]Preguntas más frecuentes (FAQ) Vintage Story Original Soundtrack Versiones Controles
Mecánicas de juego Fabricación Talla Lítica Alfarería Herrería Cocina Temperatura Hambre Minería Estabilidad temporal Energía mecánica Comercio Agricultura Ganadería
Mundo Generación del Mundo Biomas Clima Tormentas temporales
Objetos Herramientas Armas Armadura Ropa Mochilas Materiales Comida
Bloques Terreno Plantas Decorativo Iluminación Functional Minerales
Entidades Entidades hostiles Animales NPCs Jugadores
Miscellaneous List of client commands Lista de comandos del servidor Creative Starter Guide Bot System Cómo utilizar Worldedit Cinematic Camera Adjustable FPS Video Recording ServerBlockTicking