Mining


 * ''This article is about the Mining skill. For more information on training Mining, see Mining training.

Mining is perhaps one of the few skills left largely unchanged since RuneScape Classic. It is a skill that allows players to extract ores, gems, essence and other resources from rocks in mines throughout RuneScape. Mined ores can be smelted at a furnace, turning them into metal bars that can be forged (shaped by hammering) into metal objects using the Smithing skill, or used in the Crafting skill. On the map, mining sites are identified with a regular pickaxe, and Mining stores are identified with a gold pickaxe icon. Mining is also the only skill that provides random rewards (gems) to free players.

How to Mine
To mine, players need a pickaxe (the better the pickaxe and your mining level the quicker it is to mine the ores) that they have the required Mining level to mine with. Players should then choose where to mine, taking into consideration the proximity to a bank, and what ores are available. Players only need to left-click once on any rock containing ore to mine it (provided they have the level needed for that ore type). Players can discover which ore is in a rock by right-clicking and selecting Prospect (with or without a pickaxe). Experienced miners do not need to prospect every rock, as they recognise the colour of the rock and know the ore it contains. The obtained ores, gems, and essence can then be sold for profit, or used by the player for the Smithing, Crafting, and Runecrafting skills

Luck will play a certain factor in how quickly ores are obtained from mining. While the player's Mining level and the type of pickaxe that they use have an influence, there remains a certain randomness that determines when the ore is finally mined. When two players of different levels both attempt to mine the same rock, it is unlikely for the lower-levelled player to get the ore. However, while the player's Mining level certainly affects the outcome, its influence has not yet been proven. Some players believe that they can get ores faster by repeatedly left-clicking on the rock until they get an ore because by clicking a rock, it will "reset the 'luck' timer" so players will just have to click until they get an ore in one strike of their pickaxe. However, this is unproven and has not been confirmed by Jagex but is now removed from the game due to the advisor update.

Pickaxes
The pickaxes used in mining can be equipped like a weapon, giving players one more space in their inventory. A player's Mining level determines the type of pickaxe they can mine with (while their Attack level determines whether they can wield it and thus save that inventory space). As with all weapons, as the pickaxe type progresses, so to does its effectiveness both as a weapon and in its ability to mine faster. Pickaxes are sold by Nurmof in the Dwarven Mines, Tati in Keldagrim, Bob in Lumbridge (bronze only), or at the Grand Exchange. Furthermore, pickaxes can be forged at the appropriate Smithing level for players who have completed the Perils of Ice Mountain quest.

* Not required. Attack is only required to wield, not mine. You can mine an ore with a pickaxe in your inventory, but wielding saves you one extra inventory space. (wich comes in handy when mining high level ores)

Minable items
Ores are obtained from the different rocks that are found in mines. On the minimap, mines are labelled with a grey pickaxe. The colour of a rock's vein corresponds to the ore's colour, so a black vein will yield coal ore, a blue vein will yield mithril ore, and so forth. Players can identify which kind of ore a rock is composed of via prospecting.

When a player clicks on a rock, they will hit it with their pickaxe and attempt to extract the ore. The higher level the rock (e.g., adamantite and runite), the longer the mining procedure will take, requiring the player to have patience.

After the ore has been mined, the rock will no longer have a visible vein of colour for a while. (In the past, the whole rock would change shade when the ore was mined.) Eventually, another ore will respawn and the rock will regain its vein of colour. Players can only mine a rock when ore is available. Ore respawn times differ with the level requirement of the rock and the amount of people on the server (e.g., runite rocks can take up to 25 minutes to respawn, while iron rocks take about 3 seconds). Rune essence is an exception to this as there is no respawn time and players can mine continuously.

Players can continuously mine multiple pieces of coal and gold ore in the Living Rock Caverns until the concentrated coal/gold rock collapses. Sometimes, players will mine two ores at once, gaining experience for both ores. While wearing Varrock armour, players may find that they can mine three ores at once in the cavern. Mining coal in the Living Rock Caverns requires level 77 Mining, while mining gold there requires level 80 Mining. Beware of aggressive, ranged/melee level 120 and 140 creatures that protect the rocks.

Mines table
See Mines for a more detailed listing of mines.

Free-to-play mines
All players have access to these mines. See Mines for a more detailed listing of mines.

Misthalin mines

 * Al Kharid Mine
 * Barbarian Village Mine
 * East Varrock Mine
 * West Varrock Mine
 * Edgeville Dungeon Mine
 * Lumbridge Swamp South-East and South-West mine

Asgarnia mines

 * Asgarnian Ice Caves mine
 * Crafting Guild Mine
 * Dwarven Mine
 * Mining Guild
 * Rimmington Mine

Island mines

 * Crandor Mine
 * Karamja Volcano Mine

Wilderness mines

 * Hobgoblin Mine
 * Steel Mine
 * Wilderness Rune Mine
 * Wilderness Skeleton Mine

Members mines
Only members can access these mines. See Mines for a more detailed listing of mines.

Kandarin Mines


 * Coal Trucks


 * Heroes' Guild Mine

Dwarven Mines
 * Grand Tree mine


 * Keldagrim mines
 * Arzinian Mine within Keldagrim

Fremennik Mines
 * Living Rock Caverns

Miscellaneous Mines
 * Fremennik Province mine
 * Jatizso mine
 * Runite vein in Neitiznot
 * Dorgeshuun mines
 * Tzhaar City mine
 * Abandoned Mine in Morytania
 * Shilo Village Mine
 * Piscatoris Mining Site

Shooting Stars
Shooting Stars are a part of the Distractions and Diversions, which is for members only. They can be found via a Telescope in a Player Owned House. They fall in waves every 2 hours on all Members worlds and will land around 2–15 minutes after each other. The stars can be from size 1 (10 Mining required) up to size 9 (90 Mining required). Bigger stars give more stardust in total, but are much harder to mine. There are nine areas in RuneScape that shooting stars will fall. You can learn more about the specific locations in the Distractions and Diversions guide. If you reach your limit of 200 stardust, you can still carry on mining the star for Mining experience. Mining stars give players stardust. 200 stardust may be exchanged for:

For an exact total of 0 coins.
 * 152 cosmic runes
 * 52 astral runes
 * 20 noted gold ores
 * 50,002 coins

If you are very desperate about finding a shooting star then make a clan to find them. If you are going to make a clan then you need someone in their Player Owned House to look through their telescope and find out where and when it will land, this way when one person finds it they can say where it is and what size it is. There is one problem, however, with making a clan. If there a lot of players in the clan then there will be more players mining the shooting star, which means that you would get comparatively less stardust.

Random events
Random events are events that happen at random times. They were introduced to stop macroers, or people who use programs to play RuneScape automatically for them. Some random events include non-player characters asking players to do a task for them and rewarding them if they are successful or monsters that appear and attack the player. In Mining, there are quite a few random events.

Gems
When mining your player may find a gem in the rock. A player's chances of finding gems are increased when wearing a charged amulet of glory. There also seems to be a positive correlation between a player's mining level and the frequency of gems they receive while mining - that is, the higher one's mining level is, the more likely they are to receive gems while mining. There is also an extremely small chance of finding more than one gem in a rock.

Rock golem (Discontinued)
While mining, a Rock Golem may appear and begin attacking the player.

The combat level of the golem depends on the player's combat level, and it will always be higher than the player's. The Rock Golem's combat level varies from level 14 to 159. Players may either attempt to kill it, or run away. The Rock Golem also had a ranged attack. If a player killed the golem, it can drop ores, dwarven stouts, pickaxes, uncut gems, or nothing.

Rock Golems were especially vulnerable to pickaxes.

Since the random event update, Rock Golems cannot be found with a random event - though, they are in the enchanted valley with the rest of the discontinued random creatures.

Pickaxe head (Discontinued)
While mining, the player's Pickaxe head may fly off. The head lands somewhere nearby, usually 3 to 10 squares away. When this occurs, the player has to find the pickaxe head quickly before it disappears or before someone else sees and grabs it (and some would try to extort money from the player to return the pickaxe head). Once retrieved, the player can use the pickaxe head on the handle to put the pickaxe back together.

With the update of 25 February 2009, this has been discontinued. Any pickaxe heads in a player's inventory or bank was transformed back into a full pickaxe. Handles were removed from the game.

Animation when mining
It should be noted that when mining a player's animation will never be stopped unless they log out, die, or left-click somewhere else or eat/drink anything or drop something. So, with this in mind, players could, in theory, mine continuously until the ore runs out. One example of this is when players are attacked, their mining animation may be delayed or seem as if it has been stopped, but in reality they are actually still mining.

Players could also transfer to another ore if they feel that the ore they are mining is taking too long. The animation will transfer and you might find mining faster this way.

Power mining
Also known as drop mining, this is where a player fills their inventory with ores, drops them all, and repeats. While this method of mining allows players to raise their Mining level quickly, dropping a whole inventory of ores can take some time. Also, by using this method, a player would be missing out on Smithing experience or money from selling the ore. Another method of power mining is to drop an ore just as another ore is mined, allowing players to mine while dropping ores at nearly the same speed as mining without dropping ores. Some mining spots for:


 * Free-to-play- Power mining iron is a popular way to quickly raise levels in free-to-play. Good locations include the Hobgoblin Mine (located in levels 29-31 wilderness) and the Al-Kharid (Scorpion) Mine. Other good locations are in the Rimmington Mine, as this area is usually deserted. Mining and dropping iron can lead to around 37000 exp an hour. However, the Dwarven Mine is not as good for lower levelled players, as there are level 14 Scorpions and two level 32 King Scorpions which are aggressive towards players under level 65.
 * Members- The Granite Quarry in the Al-Kharid desert is a useful place to power mine. This requires the player to carry Waterskins or an Enchanted water tiara to avoid the effects of the desert heat, but Granite provides better experience than iron. You can also cast the Lunar Spell "Humidify" to keep your water skins filled (another less efficient method is, if you have completed Enakhra's Lament, you can run inside of the temple and use the fountain that you melted during the quest). You can get up to 80,000 experience an hour doing granite, although most players are only able to get around 50k per hour. The only mining spot in the Quarry that can provide 80k exp per hour, is the "Crossover", the area with two sandstones and 2 granites next to each other. If a player chooses to mine iron instead, the mine south of Piscatoris Fishing Colony is another good place to power mine iron.
 * On RSC your extra ores auto drop.

An extremely helpful tip when dropping the ores is to generally drop a stack of ores located near the top. A stack refers to one of the four columns (in your inventory, since there are 28 spaces, with 7 in each column, four per row). Right-click and drop the first ore located near your upper most stack, and as soon as you click on the Drop option, right-click again and just repeat the process. The reason why this method is good is since it does not require much timing or accuracy, since the right-clicking will be based on your previous right-click. The Drop option is conveniently located right below each pixel, so this provides a smooth flux of movement!

Ore Running
This is a far less popular type of power mining. The main difference is that players do not drop all of their precious ores. All you need is a friend who is willing to run back and forth from the bank to your mining spot for payment or profit of ores. When you have a full inventory of Iron ore (F2P) or Granite (P2P), you trade them to your runner before mining another full load of ores. Your runner will then take the ores to the bank and withdraw them as notes before bringing them back to you for payment or a percentage of the ores, usually half. This is still a good form of power mining that allows you to keep some of your ores and runners can also profit from your ability to mine quickly. The reason this is so unpopular is that it is usually very easy for a runner to find a power miner who is dropping or willing to give all of their ores for free. With the new trading limits enforced by runescape, it is harder to ore run as a non member can only trade 10,000 coins in a period of 15 minutes which is highly inefficient. However, if you are friends with the runner for 3 months (must both be on friends list) then the trade limit increases to 40,000 coins.

Magic Mining
This term refers to the use of the Superheat Item spell, available to players with level 43 or higher magic. Using this technique allows players to emerge from a mine with an inventory full of bars instead of ores, at the cost of one nature rune per bar (with a fire staff equipped). Players should enter the mine with an equipped fire staff, a stack of nature runes, and a pickaxe in their inventory. After mining the appropriate ore and coal, the player casts the spell, which frees up extra inventory space so the process can continue. This allows players to spend far longer in a mine before returning to a bank, and streamlines the smelting process. Using this technique to create mithril bars in the Mining Guild is one of the most effective ways to gain Mining and Smithing experience in the game. In addition, when casting Superheat Item on an iron ore, there is no longer a 50% chance of success (or 80% if you are over 40 smithing); it is always 100% when casting Superheat Item.

Busy world versus empty world
The rate that ore respawn for each rock is proportional to the number of players logged in that world. This means that the same rock will respawn quicker in a busy world, like World 1 or World 2, than it would in a world with fewer players, such as World 127. This is especially important to consider when power mining (see above).

For general mining, it is slightly more advisable that players go to a quieter trading world such as World 127. Although it has a slower rate of rock respawn, there are much fewer players in the world and, therefore, less competition for the rocks. As for selling the ores, the new method of trading in the Grand Exchange allows the player to make offers with players in all servers. The only disadvantage, as mentioned before, is the ore respawn rate plus the disadvantage of the traditional method of trading as there would be very few people wishing to purchase your ore.

Wield the pickaxe
Players are strongly recommended to wield their pickaxe. This way, they have more inventory space to allow them to carry ores. To wield picks players must have the appropriate Attack level, as the pickaxe is considered a weapon.

Wear light items
Players are strongly recommended to wear few items or nothing at all other than their pickaxe. Members are advised to wear the boots of lightness, obtained in the Temple of Ikov dungeon (no quests required), so that their weight is lower, therefore allowing them to run for longer periods of time. Also, wearing the Spotted Cape or Spottier Cape from the Hunter Skill can be very useful, as well as Penance gloves from the Barbarian Assault mini-game and the Agile legs and the Agile top from the Agility Skill. If they are wearing armour, then they would be quite heavy, making them lose a large amount of energy in a short amount of time.

Wear Varrock armour
Among other benefits, the Varrock armour (obtained from completing the different levels of difficulty of the Varrock Diary) offers a small chance of obtaining two ores at the same time from one rock. The player will get experience for both ores. As the Varrock armour is upgraded upon completing the tasks of the diary, this unique effect will be available for rocks up to adamantite.

Wilderness mine tips
In the Wilderness, players can be attacked by dangerous Revenants, all of whom can hit very high in any attack style, and can freeze and/or teleblock. They can even steal players out of combat with another monster. Before you begin mining, check which attack you are weakest to in terms of equipment bonus (Magic or Ranged. Melee does not matter since you will be running and will not be next to the Revenant), as revenants primarily attack with whatever you are weakest to. If a Revenant does attack you, the best thing to do is to use the Howl scroll (while you have a spirit wolf around) to make it flee; or if you do not have a wolf, turn on the protection prayer of which attack you are weakest to if you can, run away (preferably south, in hopes that they won't be able to attack you in a lower level of the wilderness), and switch worlds as soon as you are out of range.

Switch worlds
For higher level ores such as adamantite or runite, it is sometimes faster to switch between servers rather than wait for the rocks to respawn. This is not recommended for any lower level ores.

PvP Worlds
If you want to power mine you could go to a PvP world with nothing but wielding a pickaxe and a chest-type armour and shield. Usually all the other players are too busy attacking each other to mine or notice you, so you have almost no competition. With the update of being auto-skulled, you must be willing to lose your pickaxe and armour. If you want to keep the ores for profit, keep your inventory on the log out screen and watch your mini-map. Log out if you notice anyone running toward you. Wearing a dragon hide body and legs are preferred over two pieces of rune armour to prevent getting hit from long range by magic spells.


 * It is also recommended to wield only the pickaxe when mining in a normal world and  leave your armour in a bank  to have less weight.

Non-member Training
Here are some suggested training methods for players to raise their Mining level.


 * Level 1 to 15: Mine clay, and sell it for coins, or use it for crafting. An alternative which also levels Runecrafting or provides income is rune essence. Rune essence is easier to mine because only a left-click is required and a full inventory is mined in one go. Rune essence can be mined only after completing the Rune Mysteries quest, by talking to Sedridor in the basement of the wizard's tower, or Aubury in Varrock (recommended as it is close to Varrock east bank).
 * Level 15 to 40: Mine iron rocks. Iron can be obtained quickly, making it a valuable rock to use when levelling up. Iron is the best ore to gain experience all the way to level 99. If coins are needed, then coal can be mined, but it is better to wait until access to the Mining Guild has been granted at level 60 Mining. From level 41 onwards the player can mine with a rune pickaxe and usually mine iron in one strike of pickaxe.
 * Level 40 to 60: Mine iron rocks in the Dwarven Mine or gold rocks in the Crafting Guild. Getting up these levels will take much longer and players should be prepared to put in some time. Power mining iron as recommended for the previous levels will take about 84 hours of work. Putting in an hour a day it could be done in about 3 months.
 * Level 60 to 85: Mine coal rocks in the Mining Guild, or continue power mining iron as the faster option.
 * Level 85 to 99: If coins are wanted mine runite ore in the wilderness. Power mining iron is recommended for the quickest rate of experience in the non-member worlds.

Member Training
Members have additional training options:
 * Similar to non-members, mining iron is very good experience. If you have Ardougne cape 1 the best place to mine iron ore is north of the Kandarin Monastery, you can teleport there using the cape. There are 6 iron rocks there and you can bank quickly using a ring of duelling. This method is quicker than dropping the ore, unless you are using mousekeys.


 * There is an additional 3 iron rock formation east of Ardougne, and another south of the Piscatoris Fishing Colony. The iron mine closest to a bank is north of Yanille, where there are nine iron rocks nearby. The most efficient spot for mining in this area is the 3 iron rock formation in the southwest part of the mine. These iron ore can also be banked in the Port Khazard deposit box, although it is actually a closer walk to the Yanille bank from the 3 iron formation.
 * Members also have the option to combine mining with very fast banking trips. The Ring of duelling and some of the dragonstone equipment allow players to teleport to a bank and quickly get back to the mining area. Slower teleport options involve using a house portal.
 * The Shilo Village gem rock mine is easily reached by activating the Karamja gloves 3. The gloves teleport ends at the gem mine. Mining the gems rocks on the group and the ones below allows continuous mining. With a Ring of duelling-based bank trip, this gives very fast Mining experience.
 * The Crafting guild gold rock mine are within easy reach using a Skill necklace teleport. After mining the gold ores, use a Ring of duelling to Castle Wars bank.
 * Another decent mining option is to mine and drop granite rock; with the Enchanted water tiara players can stay at the mines for extended periods of time; employ the use of the Humidify (Lunar Magics) spell with water-skins, this allows the miner to remain in the desert as long as the required runes are available in the inventory. Granite power-mining gives more experience per hour than iron.
 * A very good way to powermine is iron mining in the Dorgeshuun Mines (requires the Lost Tribe quest). This has the advantage that you can quickly sell all your ores to Mistag to get some money (albeit not much, but more than most powermining).
 * Mining Shooting Stars gives the fastest experience and does not require banking; however, only one appears every two hours, making it difficult to mine for long periods of time. It is also beneficial because you can receive rewards for mining into the core, as well as experience. See Distractions and Diversions for more information.
 * Drop mining only is interesting if bank trips are slow. The mining area south of the Piscatoris Fishing Colony is very close to the teleport of the Spirit Kyatt familiar. The mine features three iron rocks around a single square, enabling mining without moving. On a full world this allows for constant mining. Use duel rings and glory amulets to bank the ores.
 * For players at and above level 80 Mining, mining concentrated Gold rocks is a fast way of levelling. Players can mine a full load of ores then use the nearby deposit pulley to send the ores to bank. The concentrated Gold rocks are located in Living Rock Caverns.
 * Players can also mine tons of gold ore in the Arzinian mine in the Between a Rock quest and have a nearby dwarf bank it for a small amount of gold ore.

Temporary boosts

 * Mining cape raises one level when cape is equiped, or when a player selects the 'boost' option that comes with the cape.
 * Dwarven Stout - Drinking this will raise a player's Mining and Smithing levels by 1 for a short time. Dwarven stouts can be bought in Falador one at a time, or members can buy them in bulk in Burthorpe. They are also a common drop from dwarves, and can be bought in several places in members areas, as well as brewed using the Cooking skill. There are several re-spawns in the dwarf tavern along the shortcut under White Wolf Mountain (you need to complete Fishing Contest to go there).
 * Mature dwarven stout - Members only. Drinking this will raise a player's Mining and Smithing by level 2 for a short time. Players receive two mature dwarven stouts as a reward for completing the quest Forgettable Tale of a Drunken Dwarf, but they can also be brewed using the Cooking skill.
 * A brown spicy stew can raise Mining temporarily by up to 6; however, it can also decrease it by up to 6.
 * Braindeath 'rum' raises Mining by one level and Strength by 3, but decreases some other stats.
 * Desert wyrms summoned with the Summoning skill will give the player's Mining an invisible boost of 1 level.
 * Void ravagers summoned with the Summoning skill will give the player's Mining a boost of 1 level + 1 invisible boost.
 * Obsidian golems summoned with the Summoning skill will give the player's Mining an invisible boost of 7 levels.
 * Lava titans summoned with the Summoning skill will give the player's Mining an invisible boost of 10 levels.
 * Star sprites from a Shooting Star will reward you with being able to mine 2 ores at once (25% chance), lasting for the amount of stardust you collected (200 stardust equals a 15-minute boost); it does work on runite.

Special Mining Areas

 * Coal Trucks - The coal trucks are located west from Seers' Village and north from Ardougne. There are 18 coal rocks and handy carts for storing coal in. The carts can store 120 at a time and it is also recommended to take 28 coal when leaving as well. There is a quick way or a slow way to get to and from the coal trucks.
 * Quick Way: With 20 Agility go across the log that is on the east side of the coal trucks. The Camelot teleport spell can also be used for quick access to the Seers' bank
 * Slow Way: To walk all the way around the lake, past the fishing guild, to Seers' Village.
 * Once in Seers' Village go north-west from Seers' Village bank and there are more coal trucks in the shed. Remove all the coal and bank, repeating the process until all the ore has been taken.

After completing the Seers' Village Diary the coal trucks can hold up to a max of 196 coal before having to be emptied.

You can save a couple of seconds while banking using the skills necklace's Mining Guild teleport, which teleports you directly in front of the stairs leading down to the mining area.
 * Mining Guild - In the Mining Guild there are 37 coal and 5 mithril rocks. It is close to a bank (just climb the ladders to the west and head north). Level 60 Mining is required to enter (level 59 miners can achieve this by drinking a Dwarven Stout just before entering the guild). There is one especially efficient place to mine, in the south-east corner, where there are 6 coal in very close proximity. Mining mithril is not recommended in the guild unless there is no-one else at the rocks. An anvil is available outside of the guild in the North end of the mines. The anvil, in combination with the superheat spell, allows the player to smith the ores they mine.  The smithed items can be turned into coins with the high alchemy spell or sold at the nearby shop avoiding trips to the bank.


 * Crafting Guild - The Crafting Guild is the best place in free play to mine gold, silver, and clay. 40 crafting and a Brown apron are required to enter. Members can easily teleport there by use of a Skills necklace or the balloon transport system. Gold ore is very valuable and in high demand by members using the Goldsmith Gauntlets for quick smithing experience, so free players hoping to make money mining would benefit greatly by training their Crafting level to 40.


 * Arzinian Mine - After completing the Between a Rock... quest, members can access the largest gold mine in the game, with over 100 gold rocks. Players must talk to Dondakan while wearing a Gold helmet in order to access it. To leave the mine, simply remove the helmet or log off and log in again. The mine is very far from a bank; however, a short ways away, there is a dwarf who will deliver Gold ore to the bank for you in exchange for a 20% cut of the profits, rounded up. The fee is halved if the player is wearing a Ring of Charos (a).


 * Shooting Star - A shooting star can be seen through a telescope in a Player-owned house every two hours. Details will be given, such as the location of impact site and time remaining until impact. Once a shooting star has crashed onto Gielinor, a player may search it out and mine it. Mining the star will give the player stardust, which can be exchanged for some rewards from a Star sprite at the middle of the star, after the star has been fully mined. The sprite will also give the player an ability to mine more than one ore per rock (for a limited amount of time). Only 200 stardust pieces can be mined from the star. After that, the player can continue to mine the star and get experience (amount of experience depends on the level of star, or the amount of outer shell of the star still intact). This can be helpful to assist people in breaking the star apart so they can get their reward. Also, a star sprite can only reward a player once per day. It is recommended that the player exchanges a full 200 stardust pieces, for a larger reward.


 * Living Rock Caverns - The living rock cavern has Concentrated coal rocks and Concentrated gold rocks, which can be mined for multiple amounts of ore, gaining fast amounts of experience, and with the nearby deposit box, you gain good amounts of money from it. You need 77 and 80 Mining for coal and gold respectively.

Trivia

 * On 3 July 2007, the mining animation was dramatically changed. The change initially irked some players, likely because they had become accustomed to the very steady pace and sound of the prior animation. Some players believe this "nerfed" mining as the animation seems longer thus apparently increasing the time a rock is hit before an ore is yielded.
 * There are some old RS Classic mining rocks around Ardougne, where some players have been known to pull off the ring of stone trick to surprise unsuspecting players. However, these rocks were graphically updated to the new new look on 17 November 2009.
 * There are old RS Classic mining rocks near Rellekka, north of Shilo Village, and south of Keldagrim. The ring of stone can be used at these locations to transform into rocks that are identical in appearance.
 * You cannot obtain gems while mining pure essence.
 * You cannot obtain gems while mining concentrated gold or coal.
 * When you start to mine a rock and, before you finish, trade with another player, it appears that you are picking away at the player. It will only work if the player is next to you.
 * Some rocks, when looked at from a certain angle, look like the faces of the Tzhaar.
 * With the release of the Living Rock Caverns, the number of people with 99 mining started to rise, as mining now became easier to train, similar to Woodcutting or Fishing.
 * Early in RS classic it was possible to mine gems from rocks, that you did not have the proper level to normally mine ore. This allowed a player to rapidly click on the rock and obtain gems without actually mining it. This exploit was swiftly fixed.
 * You can obtain strange rocks while mining concentrated gold or coal.
 * If two players are mining a single rock, it is possible for one player to receive a gem from the rock while the other player gets the ore.
 * Though not proven it seems that if two players begin mining a gem rock at the same time occasionally both will receive a gem for it.(test)
 * It is possible to receive more than one gem while mining the same rock before obtaining the ore.
 * It is possible to obtain the ore from a rock a few seconds after someone else has mined the ore from the same rock.