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Gravel is a type of block typically found in naturally occurring pits, underwater, underground or in The Nether. Like Sand, Gravel will fall to the lowest y-coordinate below it if there is no block underneath it. Therefore it is possible to suffocate with careless use of gravel by being crushed beneath the weight. If the lowest block in a column of Gravel is occupied by a nonsolid object, like a Torch, the Gravel block will disintegrate into a gravel resource instead.

In Alpha, it has a roughly an 8.5% chance to drop Flint once destroyed, which is used to create Flint and Steel and Arrows. Gravel blocks that didn't drop Flint can be picked up and placed back in the world to try again. However, blocks that drop flint do not drop gravel, so it cannot be exploited infinitely. Shovels will destroy this block quicker than normal, like Sand and Dirt. In tests, shovels seem to raise the chance of flint being dropped.

Due to the fact that Gravel is affected by gravity, it was used to make hallways that seal when water touches torches supporting it, creating an Airlock.

There was a glitch in an older version of singleplayer Creative mode that caused a flood if water was placed on a wall with blocks affected by gravity; this bug has since been fixed.

Minecarts prevent Gravel from falling.

File:Gravel.PNG

Some gravel

Trivia

  • On occasion, some normally generated maps may produce beaches made of gravel instead of sand.
  • Gravel spawns in 2 block high bands across the walls of the Nether.
File:Gravel Beach.PNG

A Gravel Beach

  • A great way to power mine massive columns of gravel is to dig under the stone or dirt that it is resting on. Under that dirt or stone, place a torch. Mine the dirt or stone, and watch as the column falls into the torch quickly, giving you the gravel blocks. Note that the gravel must fall on the torch for it to be mined, and mining gravel in this way does not appear to yield flint. This technique also works for mining columns of sand.


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