wootz figures

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Figure 1Mughal dagger Courtesy J. D. Verhoeven

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Page 1: Wootz Figures

Figure 1Mughal dagger

Courtesy J. D. Verhoeven

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Figure 2. Portrait of J N Tata, Founder of Tata Steel and the Indian Institute of Science

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Figure 3. The Materials civilisation timeline (after L E Hummel)

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Figure 4. The intensity of use of materials (after M F Ashby)

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Figure 5 Golden mask of Pharaoh Tutankhamen

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Figure 6. Chola bronze image of Nataraja, Velankanni, Government Museum, Chennai, ca AD 1000

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Figure 7. Widmanstatten pattern in meteoritic iron. Note the beautiful geometry of the pattern and the scale visible to the naked eye

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Figure 8. Emperor Gupta looking on, as the Delhi Iron Pillar is being completed and inscribed.

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Figure 9. Cast iron pagoda from China

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Figure 10. Tatara Iron Making in JapanCourtesy T. Inoue

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Figure 11 Tama-hagane- Japanese ironmade in a tatara furnaceCourtesy T. Inoue

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Figure 11. Iron-carbon (Fe-C) diagram and first phase diagram of any alloy to be established, done by Roberts-Austen in 1898 after whom austenite is named ( redrawn from the original).

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Figure 12. Historical evolution of Fe-C diagram (after J. Wadsworth)

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Figure 13. Microstructures of steels (a) ferrite grains in a hypoeutectoidsteel, (b) pearlite lamellae in an eutectoid steel (c) pearlite with cementite at grain boundaries in a hypereutectoid steel (d) martensite from Osmond

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Figure 15. Sir Henry Bessemer, inventor of the Steel Converternamed after him.

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Figure 16. Sketch of an Italian rapier sword

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Figure 17. Greek conqueror Alexander being presented ‘ferrum candidum’ or bright iron by Indian kingPorus.

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Figure 18. Encounter between King Richard and Sultan Saladin, showing off their swords: Richard cuts a steel bar, while Saladinamazingly slices a pillow with a Damascus sword ofwootz steel.

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Figure 19. A view of the fabled Hampi bazaar of theVijayanagara kingdom

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Figure 20. A Deccan painting showing swords kept at hand even during a romantic rendezvous

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Figure 21. Shivaji with soldiers and retinue

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Figure 22. Sword blades of wootz being sheared by the British as part of the disarmamentdrive following the Indian Mutiny of 1857.

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Figure 23 Sword of Tipu SultanCourtesy the Clive Museum

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Figure 24. Tipu, seated on his fabled Tiger Throne looking at his collection of swords, while the sculpture-cum-organ of the Tipu’sTiger with the Englishman being mauled, gives a plaintive cry in the background!.

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Figure 25. A conjectural sketch of Buchanan’s furnace.

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Figure 26. A sword from the Thanjavur armoury

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Figure 27. A Damascus dagger found in Ootacamund

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Figure 28. Michael Faraday, inventor of electricity and investigator of wootz

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Figure 29. Specimen of wootz in Science Museum, London

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Figure 30 Etched structure of Wootz ingot revealing dendrites

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Figure 31. The word for ironsmith (lohar) in Sanskrit as inscribeby Michael Faraday

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Figure 32. A conjecture of Breant in the thick of experiments, finally exclaiming “Enfin! (At last!), Experiment No. 301 shows thatwootz= iron + carbon!” alluding to the astonishing 300 odd experiments he did onwootz steel.

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Figure 33 Sketch of P A Anossoff, Russian Investigator

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Figure 34 Sketch of N. Belaiew

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Figure 35 Sketch of D. K. Tschernoff

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Figure 36 Sketch of Cyril Stanley Smith

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Figure 37. Superplastic flow in ultra high carbon steel (after Sherby)

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Figure 38. Fine grained microstructure Courtesy O. Sherby and J. Wadsworth)

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Figure 39. Banding in V containing steels Courtesy J. D. Verhoeven

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Figure 40 Ladder patternCourtesy J. D. Verhoeven

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Figure 41. Bladesmith Ric Fuller forging ‘Damascus ‘ blades at the Smithsonian Folk Life Festival in Washington Courtesy Ric Fuller

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Figure 42. Sketch of Indonesian Kris

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Figure 43 Steps involved in making the Samurai swordCourtesy T. Inoue

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Figure 44. Sketch of a Japanese samurai warrior with his sword

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Figure 45 Making Japanese samurai swords and testing for fatal errors'

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Figure 46. Sketch of Japanese tsuba – wrought iron guards

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Figure 47 Mokuma gane

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Figure 48 Damask patternCourtesy Manfred Sachse

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Figure 49 Illustration of toughening by laminate compositeCourtesy J Wadsworth

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Figure 50 Wootz Crucible sites in IndiaAfter P. T. Craddock

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Figure 51 Kodumanl crucibles and iron smelting debris

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Figure 52 Artistic conjecture inspired bySangam Tamil literature of poetess Auvaiyarlooking on as chieftainAnci is locked in battle while artisans work overtime to make crucible steel for spears

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Figure 53 Assemblage of crucibles from Mel siruvalur

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Figure 54 Microstructure of a cross section of crucible from Mel-Siruvalur showing globule of steel

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Figure 55 Crucibles collected by K. N. P. RaoCourtesy P. T. Craddock

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Figure 56 Refractory of the crucible Courtesy Thelma Lowe and Gareth Thomas

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Figure 57 Iron Making in Sri Lanka (after Gill Juleff)

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Figure 58 Reconstruction of Furnace used at Merv (From Griffiths and Feuerbach, 1999)

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Figure 59 Sketch of iron making by the Agarias

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Figure 60 Materials Tetrahedron

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15

•Mechanical: Superplasticity•High strength •Toughness•Damascus Swords

•Ultra high carbon Steel•Ferrite and carbide

•Crucible steel making•Forging

MaterialsHypertetrahedron

Wootz Steel

Image002.gif

Figure 61 Materials hypertetrahedron for Wootz steel

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Figure 62 NanowiresCourtesy W. Kochmann

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Figure 63. Indentation curvesCourtesy W. Kochmann

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Figure 64 Multiscale ModellingCourtesy Greg Olson

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Figure 65. Damascene Cu (Image courtesy IBM)

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