Editing Some Thoughts About Steel

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As such, while having a great improvement over iron as a usable tool they had too much carbon to take a good hardening and tempering to make a combination material that was very hard to hold an edge and resilient to flex rather than break. Over the ages, various peoples had access to different ore deposits and developed various methods of forging that iron into steel.  
 
As such, while having a great improvement over iron as a usable tool they had too much carbon to take a good hardening and tempering to make a combination material that was very hard to hold an edge and resilient to flex rather than break. Over the ages, various peoples had access to different ore deposits and developed various methods of forging that iron into steel.  
  
There was WOOTZ, a crucible steel from the Asia Minor area which was made by adding iron and carbonaceous material s together with a frit / fluxing agent into a clay pot which was sealed air tight and heated to the highest temperature the early forges could produce and held there for a long period of time. I may also state that some but not all of the Viking blades were made by a similar process. Some folks also consider this to be the original "Damascus Steel". [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wootz_steel Wootz Steel-Wikipedia]  
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There was WOOTZ, a crucible steel from the Asia Minor area which was made by adding iron and carbonaceous material s together with a frit / fluxing agent into a clay pot which was sealed air tight and heated to the highest temperature the early forges could produce and held there for a long period of time. I may also state that some but not all of the Viking blades were made by a similar process. Some folks also consider this to be the original "Damascus Steel". [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wootz_steel [Wootz Steel-Wikipedia]]  
  
 
Then about the same time; B.C.E. to early ~1700 C.E.; the method of folding and hammering layers of good steel came to be used. Wenow call this Damascus steel, pattern welded, or layered steel. It was the main component of cutting tools throughout Asia and much of Northern Europe. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pattern_welding Wootz Steel-Wikipedia]  
 
Then about the same time; B.C.E. to early ~1700 C.E.; the method of folding and hammering layers of good steel came to be used. Wenow call this Damascus steel, pattern welded, or layered steel. It was the main component of cutting tools throughout Asia and much of Northern Europe. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pattern_welding Wootz Steel-Wikipedia]  

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