thought: steel is such a common material for tools because, primarily, of the abundance of iron; it's the most abundant metal. As such, a lot of research has gone into making tools and structures out of iron and iron-based alloys.
But what materials would tools and structures be made of if given an unlimited amount of any ores you want? (you have to smelt, alloy, and forge them yourself though) If iron didn't have the advantage of abundance, what would tools have been made of instead?
@Tathar Well, you need electricity to process it (it involves electrolysis, iwrc), so it's unlikely it would have developed early, and the titanium age certainly wouldn't have replaced the bronze age
Oh, I wasn't thinking in historical terms, but electricity could fall under limitless abundance too.
@Tathar I mean, the thing I said was abundant was the ore, I dont' think there's an ore of electricity x3
I'm just imagining miners prospecting for batteries now.
@Felthry
In terms of number of steps, or in terms of needing specific stuff to extract it with? Because the latter is mitigated by limitless abundance too.