Lava

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Lava
Lava.png
Grid Lava.png
Type Fluid
Physics Partially
Transparency Yes
Luminance Yes, 15
Blast Resistance [edit] 0 (Flowing)
500 (Still)
Tool Use-bucket.png
Stackable Yes (64)
Speed of fluid movement Slow
Speed of walking through Very Slow
First Appearance 0.0.12a
Data values Flowing Lava
dec: 10 hex: 0A
Still Lava
dec: 11 hex: 0B

Lava is a dangerous fluid block that emits light and sets other blocks on fire. It represents molten rock in real life.

Contents

[edit] Natural occurrence

Lava primarily occurs as magma in large pools deep underground, on levels 1 through 10. It can also occur as lava rivers from a single spring block, pouring down walls into pools. It is one of the most common causes of death while mining underground. But, if precautions are taken (Not digging straight down, up, having buckets of water), accidents can be prevented.

Since Alpha 1.2.6, Lava also spawns as lakes. They are rare and can be found at any elevation within any biome, can cause forest fires, and sometimes have floating chunks of stone or dirt above them, occasionally with vines or trees growing on the floating chunks (very small islands are sometimes in the center of a lava lake as well.) Lava lakes vary in size and depth, and the lakes will carve out a small ceiling area above them when generated below the surface.

A few blocks of lava can also be found in NPC Villages in smithies.

In the Nether, lava is extremely common, appearing more frequently than water in the Overworld. Lava also pours from the ceiling and walls.

[edit] Behavior

[edit] Burning

Fenceposts are not burnt by lava above them.

[edit] Flowing

In the Overworld, lava travels 3 blocks in any direction. In the Nether, lava travels 7 blocks in any direction as water does in the Overworld.

Lava flows far more slowly than Water, and sometimes sourceless lava flows will linger for a very long time. It flows 3 blocks horizontally from its contact point (7 in the nether), vs. water's 7. See Fluids for detailed information on how lava and water flow.

The interaction of lava and water:

The primary natural source of obsidian is rivers flowing onto the surface of lava pools in deep caves; care should be taken if mining these since there is usually a layer of lava under the obsidian.

Lava which is flowing will destroy the following in its path: wheat, flowers, mushrooms, levers, both types of torches, redstone wire, and rails. Note it doesn't flow over pressure plates, fences, or even wood or wool blocks. Sugar cane holds back lava, but will disappear if the Sugar cane's water source is destroyed by the lava.

If lava falls onto redstone wire bordered by water, the redstone turns into obsidian, with no loss of lava. This is considered a bug, however Notch has said that it will remain for the meanwhile as a feature;[citation needed] see the section on Obsidian for more information.

Using a redstone wire, a one-block lava flow can be redirected by supplying power to the spring block, which will cause it to reset the flow towards the now-nearest terrain depression. This is further elaborated in this thread (only viewable when logged-in). It cannot, however, be reversed. This re-calculation is made because redstone wire when toggled changes the block from redstone(on), to redstone(off). Whenever a block updates on any side of lava, the lava re-calculates where to flow, but does not cut off its current direction of flow.

If there is lava flowing above a block, the lava seeps through.

As of the 1.9 pre-release, if there is a body of lava flowing above a block, the lava visually seeps down through the host block. This "dripping" effect also applies to Water, although water droplets seep through at a much faster rate. These droplets are purely aesthetic and will not affect the player or other blocks in any way.

[edit] Infinite Lava Duplication

As of 1.9pre5 infinite lava can be made much the same as infinite water. When placing 4 source blocks of lava to the sides of an empty space in a + shape they will flow into the middle creating another source block of lava. In 1.9pre6 infinite lava springs cannot be used as a renewable resource. [1]

As of Minecraft 1.0 lava sources can no longer be duplicated.

[edit] Lava Bucket

Lava Bucket
Lavabucket.PNG
Grid Lava Bucket.png
Type Tools
Durability N/A
Stackable No
First Appearance Infdev (June 15, 2010)
Data value dec: 327 hex: 147

You can collect and place Lava springs using a Bucket. As with Water, you can only harvest the springs, not the flowing lava coming from them.

Lava can be used to make obsidian, to light an area, or to create traps. When used to create obsidian, water will be used to cool the lava either before collecting it with a diamond pickaxe in a mold in the desired shape, or by emptying the bucket next to an artificially created waterfall.[2]

Lava can be placed in a furnace in a bucket to be substituted for coal. Its burning time is 1000 seconds, compared to 80 seconds for coal (100 smelts vs. 8). Using a lava bucket as a fuel source consumes both the lava and the bucket, though Notch has hinted this may change in the future.

Lava can also be used as a garbage disposal, by creating a 3×3 box of any non-flammable block and leaving a 1 block gap inside. Pour lava into it and drop unwanted items.

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It can also be used as a light by using glass as the wall. It is also a good idea to have a contained water spring next to it, or to carry a bucket of water.

[edit] Lava bucket as a weapon

Lava buckets can be some of the most destructive weapons in the player's disposal:

[edit] Pros

[edit] Cons

[edit] Lava moulding

Lava can be combined with water for moulding structures of any size when used properly:

[edit] Pros

[edit] Cons


[edit] History

Magma at the bottom of the map in Classic
The same area as above, with water flooded in and bedrock exposed.

[edit] Classic

At first lava had a different texture Lava-Pre Creative 0.0.19a.png, but then changed to the current texture. The old texture can still be found in the terrain.png file at the minecraft.jar. In Classic, lava spreads by duplicating itself to open horizontal and downwards squares like Water. Lava is slower, though, and can be easily outrun. A quick player can block the flow of lava by building a dam. However, if the lava wave is large, a player may not be able to build fast enough. Also like water, lava slows down the player moving through it but it does so to a greater extent, and swimming through it causes greater damage. Lava is also more opaque than water and is harder to see through while you are submerged; you cannot see through lava from outside it. At the bottom of the map, magma can be found directly above bedrock in a different form, as it will trap the player and prevent the player from leaving unless water is let in and collides with it or if the player places a sand or gravel block, letting it drop into the magma. If water is let into the area where the magma is, the magma will form Stone, allowing the stone block to be removed to expose Bedrock underneath.

[edit] Survival

Since Infdev, lava flows more realistically across surfaces but not as much as water does. Lava will flow for a total distance of 3 blocks "away" from the source block (7 in The Nether). Just like water, lava will flow in a single line towards the nearest terrain depression within four blocks. Items thrown into lava flows will disintegrate. All objects burn instantaneously when dropped into lava. Fired arrows will not disintegrate, but will appear to catch fire and can still be picked up.

Magma is no longer present at the bottom of maps in this mode. Lava can melt ice and snow (but not snow blocks), much like torches can, but melt a larger area. Lava is luminous and a large lava flow is visible in the dark from quite a distance.

The creation of Obsidian was added in Alpha v.1.0.6_03.

In Beta, lava is less reactive with horizontal water flows.

Since the 0.0.19a client update on June 20, 2009, Lava's texture became animated.

Since the Seecret Friday Update 9, buckets of lava can be used to fuel a Furnace for 100 smelts. Please note that you will not get the bucket back. So unless you have a sufficient amount of iron, this method is not recommended.

Before the 1.9 prereleases, source blocks used to be unable to be duplicated over an area deeper than 1 block. Jeb said that this was a bug and is now fixed.

[edit] Trivia

[edit] Gallery

[edit] References

  1. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_qYxRUJWHd4
  2. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H-Iq7Ois6-4
  3. http://twitter.com/notch/status/10691442951327745
  4. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gtndQOYkpFQ

[edit] External links

[edit] See also

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