Grass Block

Grass is a block that was introduced very early in the game. It uses 3 textures, a grey one for the top which is then tinted to the correct colour according to what biome the block is in, one borrowed from the dirt block for the bottom, and an edited dirt texture with grass on the top edge on all of the sides. Grass appears on a natural map on the topmost blocks of the dirt layer not directly covered by leaves or fluids.

In mining, grass behaves just like dirt as it drops dirt resources and is best dug with a shovel; however, it makes a different sound when harvested and takes slightly longer to dig up. This can be used to tell when the player is about to break the surface when tunneling upwards.

Requirements
Grass only grows spontaneously during map generation. Afterward, it must spread from a nearby block. A dirt block must be placed with no solid block or fluid on top of it and have a light level of at least 4 to accept grass. Grass can spread to any of the immediately adjacent blocks in the same horizontal plane, including diagonally. Grass can also spread to blocks one level above or three levels below the source block, even if the grass/dirt blocks are hovering in the air with nothing else directly touching them. It travels downwards much faster then it does upwards, and the more grass blocks that are in range of a given dirt block, the faster it will spread there. For example, it is possible for grass to directly "jump" to a dirt block three blocks below and one block to the side of the source. It can also spread directly downwards, so long as the target dirt block has no solid block directly on top of it (stone, for example, as opposed to torches).

Grown grass will soon revert back to dirt if an opaque solid block or fluid is directly above it, although transparent solid blocks (like Fences or Leaves) will not kill grass when placed on it. Grass will not spread to a dirt block with a transparent solid block above it, but can spread from such a block. Depriving grown grass of all light without setting another opaque solid block directly above it will not kill it. Tilling grass with a hoe will remove the grass and convert it to a Farmland block, which can then revert to a dirt block from excessive foot traffic or time left unplanted, which can then return to grass.

Uses

 * Passive mobs spawn on lit grass; therefore, one can create a farm that will spawn animals using grass, or exclude passive mobs from an area by ensuring there is no grass.
 * Tilling grass with a hoe will occasionally drop seeds as well as converting it into a Farmland block, whereas tilling dirt will never drop seeds.
 * Grass can be used to make lawns, gardens or as a shade of green in Pixel Art that is on the ground.

History
Attempting to place grass blocks by means of hacking one's inventory in Classic Creative Multiplayer will cause the server to automatically kick the player. Due to Creative mode's lack of dynamic lighting, grass that is in shadow will eventually die and change to dirt. Grass in one's inventory used to have a green colour on all sides of the block.

Trivia

 * Grass and dirt changing between each other is a common cause of chunk updates.
 * Grass is one of the first seen blocks made in Minecraft, seen here. It had the top most face on all sides, resulting in "grass cubes".
 * A grass block has become the favicon for Minecraft.net and the icon for Minecraft.exe and Minecraft.app.
 * In Indev, placeable grass blocks were stored in chests for a short time, and when placed, no matter where, the grass would never die. The only way to kill the grass was to mine the block.
 * In Survival Test mode, sheep would eat grass to regrow cloth on their bodies, reverting it to dirt. Often, the grass would regrow just as quickly as sheep would eat it.
 * After the Halloween Update the resource has a weird texture when obtained in the inventory using an Inventory Editor or the /give command but will look normal when placed. This is because grass color is set by each biome instead of remaining constant throughout the map.
 * During collection a grass block will release gray particles rather than green or brown, due to the biome-specific coloring process.

Gras