Subject: Yeah, if we're talking about Aule...
Author:
Posted on: 2013-11-11 18:51:00 UTC

... then we really need to reevaluate our ideas about dwarvish biology.

Think about it: the guy's a blacksmith. The Valar were actually involved in biological creation (Arda was completely empty when they came down), but I don't think he was. So when Aule decided to make himself some kids - do we really think he would have thought to put in hormones? I mean, we know he never asked his wife for advice about it.

So: dwarves are made by a guy who mostly deals in rocks. Maybe they're basically made of stone. That explains the idea that they revert to stone when they die (not conclusively disproven). It may also explain their lust for gold and gems, if they actually need them as trace minerals - simple handling could let them be absorbed through the skin.

Now, dwarves do eat, which could be used to argue against this - but so do furnaces! Organic material goes in, energy, in the form of heat, comes out. With an efficient enough furnace - exactly the sort of thing Aule was good with - any 'food' would be a viable fuel source. (And if you like the idea that they drink a lot - alcohol? Biofuel? Yes please!)

Then we have the encounters of the dwarves with dragons... in the Wars of the Jewels, the dwarves were the only ones able to stand up to Glaurung's fire. Is it the masks they made, or is it that they're simply heatproof? Yes, they keep being driven out of places by creatures of fire - Durin's Bane, Smaug - but we don't actually have proof that any were killed by those creatures. (Possible exception - the Durin who was bane'd. But the Durins have always been a bit weird, with their possible-reincarnation thing)

What else, what else... well, obviously they can be harmed by weapons, we've seen that over and over, but I never said they were made of tough rocks. I'm thinking maybe sandstone, with a colloidal gold suspension (noted for its vivid red colour) as 'blood'. That gold content goes back to the skin-absorption theory. It would be used mostly for heat transfer from the furnace, I imagine.

By this system, dwarf 'pregnancy' may actually be an incredibly involved process - it could resemble the animal method only in appearance. That would explain why female dwarves don't get out much - they're busy spending ten years on internal baby construction!

... that's a terrible thought, actually.

hS

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