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|  6th January 2020, 06:41 PM | #1 | 
| Member Join Date: Nov 2018 
					Posts: 50
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			That looks very much like someone heated a spot on the edge, either to straighten a deformation, or in attempt to re-harden a spot.
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|  7th January 2020, 09:51 AM | #2 | |
| Member Join Date: Jan 2006 
					Posts: 936
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|  7th January 2020, 04:13 PM | #3 | 
| Member Join Date: Dec 2004 Location: Ann Arbor, MI 
					Posts: 5,503
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			Highly likely. European bladesmiths of the 19 century got plenty of wootz ingots and forged them into blades using European custom of heating the ingot to “ white”. Surprisingly ( for them) the beautiful wootz ingots produced boring monosteel blades:-) Now we know why: at temperatures above ~850C dendritic structure just melts away and there is no way to restore it. That raises another question: how did Persian or Indian masters managed to forge together 2 different samples of wootz to create scarf welding with only a thin line of amorphous steel as a scar? | 
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