Quote:
Originally Posted by Turhan's Bey Company
If a part of your dungeon is occupied by unintelligent life (evil snakes, giant insects, venomous hedgehogs, etc.), organic materials will last perhaps as little as a few weeks, certainly no more than a few years.
The key factor here, as it is in a number of environments, is life. If a cave is the lair of various critters, they'll be breathing a lot, exhaling water vapor, which is pretty damaging to anything organic over the long run. Far more importantly, though, they'll be living in it. Garments and books find themselves used as nesting material, leather gets eaten, wood gets gnawed on, and there are secondary attacks by lesser vermin living in the environment along with the big monsters.
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Ah, ok, this should have been obvious to me (considering how often I combat the vermin trying to destroy my home) but I hadn't thought about it. So even if a dry dungeon became uninhabited (by the cultists or whoever) for a few centuries, it's likely that all the usual critters will make short work of most organic matter (like robes in a wardrobe).
Quote:
Originally Posted by malloyd
If the environment is dry, sterile and free of ultraviolet (or higher energy) radiation, most stuff could easily last multiple thousands of years.
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Got it. Preserved organics require either regular upkeep or a dry, sterile environment (like a sealed tomb in a desert). Or magic, of course.
Thanks so much for your thoughtful replies.