as not been cleaned, even the country blacksmith who specializes in farming tools has no face to make such a thing. And this spear is made of Pinus tabulaeformis. Richard said as he showed it to the surroundings, as far as I know, this kind of tree is easy to spontaneously burn because of its excessive oil content. Generally, it only grows in cold areas of ice and snow, and there is almost no distribution in Pompeii. You can often see Pinus tabulaeformis on the ice field in my hometown. We use this as a torch. Gunther cut in vaguely as he chewed. Richard struck the wooden pole in two with both hands, pulled a piece of wood wire from the stubble, and put it on the candle. After a while, a blue flame burst out suddenly. The oil content of this kind of wood is shocking, and it crackles from time to time as it burns, emitting a very strong pine fragrance. Seeing that, I guess it was made by the natives in the wilderness. Richard sneered. Damn, can you imagine? Wild natives who can mine and smelt iron! He is one thousand people who don’t understand and ten thousand people don’t understand-first, where are the minerals in the wilderness that has always been known as barren; second, the ability to find the natives of minerals. An aboriginal tribe can have two hundred people in the sky, and the scale determines that they cannot complete the complicated division of labor. The inheritance and exchange of knowledge depends entirely on luck, and accuracy often requires a question mark. Even if a group of jackals find the mineral deposits by luck, why do they know exactly how to smelt them, and they also have the necessary material conditions? Maybe it is meteorite. Hutt stretched out his hand and took the spear blade to take a closer look, then shook his head to deny his guess. It was obvious that the impurities caused by insufficient smelting temperature were inexhaustible, not meteorite iron. expert. Richard gave a thumbs up. My lord, you may not have heard of some news. Woya Trading Company has been engaged i