34

This wasn't in the book, so I was wondering: in the second Hobbit movie (The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug), when:

the dwarves covered Smaug with liquefied gold

could he actually die?

5
  • 26
    They weren't trying to kill Smaug - they were trying to change his alignment.
    – Nathan
    Commented Dec 22, 2014 at 22:01
  • 3
    <comments removed> Leave the spoiler for an unrelated work out of the question, please.
    – user1027
    Commented Feb 3, 2015 at 3:54
  • 3
    The existing answers focus on whether the heat would kill him, but I wonder if the idea was actually to encase him in liquid gold, let it harden, and then have a big, more or less trapped dragon to deal with, which is a slightly less formidable opponent than a regular dragon. Even if the coat of gold only lasted a few minutes, you would have a bit of time to try and smash/stab him to death before he broke out.
    – Wad Cheber
    Commented Jun 12, 2015 at 0:18
  • 3
    That whole sequence with Smaug chasing the dwarves looked like a "Tom & Jerry" short...
    – Stone True
    Commented Dec 14, 2016 at 19:15
  • 1
    @Stone True - lol yes, and not unlike Tom & Jerry shorts, that whole scene more or less emphasized the incompetence of Smaug the same way Tom looks incompetent by being so easily fooled and thwarted every single time. Kind of makes you wonder what took people so long to take the mountain back when a hand full of Dwarves having been out of combat for so long just waltz in and slapstick their way out of death from what is touted as one of the most dangerous creatures alive... who happens to kill exactly zero of them. The book isn't so silly, but still the same general thing happens.
    – Kai Qing
    Commented Sep 18, 2017 at 17:11

7 Answers 7

39

I have not found any good picture illustrating it yet (contributions are welcome), but in the movie Smaug's belly skin shows visible glowing cracks every time he prepares to breath fire (which is in itself quite a nice cue that you want to run or hide very fast).

This indicates that his fire is not only some kind of flammable gas he only lights up in his mouth, but rather some kind of internal flame he needs to focus and channel before using it.

His inner parts have, indeed, to be very fire resistant, since dragon fire is described as so hot as to be one of the only means to destroy rings of power in the Fellowship of the Ring: That's the way four of the dwarven rings met their fate.

Wondering if this resistance is magical or natural is kind of pointless, since for Tolkien magic is some kind of power or quality native to all beings, in varying amounts depending of their kind, often used quite subtly and involuntary (for more information, see the can-the-elves-do-magic question).

Considering the amount of fire-resistance (more than melting metal temperature 1,948°F) which is then required from his inner parts, a bath of molten gold does not seem that harmful anymore for any fire-breathing dragon...

3
  • 10
    +1. It's worth noting, though, that there's no indication that Smaug is immune to drowning or suffocation. If he had inhaled when he was submerged, or if the gold had cooled fast enough to trap him or prevent him from breathing, he likely would have died.
    – Nerrolken
    Commented Feb 2, 2015 at 18:47
  • 2
    @Nerrolken Indeed, and there is no need to wait this long: Considering the density of gold, he should probably have been crushed by the liquid wave itself... Apparently, Tolkien's dragons are made of very tough stuff :)
    – Eureka
    Commented Feb 2, 2015 at 21:32
  • 4
    @Nerrolken In fact, that's closer to what happens in the book. Getting shot doesn't (directly) kill Smaug, falling in the lake does.
    – KSmarts
    Commented Feb 2, 2015 at 21:33
38

It might actually kill Smaug, though for completely different reasons than what the movie scene suggests.


As already said, the temperature of molten gold should hardly be impressive to a fire-drake – which does however not imply that they can necessarily cope with getting completely immersed in it.

But, it's rather absurd that Smaug ever sinks in the gold in the first place! Though movies almost always get it wrongTVTropes warning!, gold is really really dense. The linked page actually points out that

Gollum shouldn't have sunken in the lava of Mount Doom

since rock, liquid or not, is much denser that water/biomass. This applies far more strongly to gold: even if Smaug's body was solid lead (11 g·cm−3), he would easily float on liquid gold (19 g·cm−3)! If his body instead had a density comparable to ordinary life forms, he should pretty much be able to walk on it. (Only ≈1/20 of the body needs to be immersed to lift the rest. An actual elephant might be able to do this, as long as it would stand the heat – which it might conceivably do for a few seconds: unlike in the rather hotter (and closer to blackbody) case of lava, radiation heating isn't that effective for liquid gold; it would at first only sear the elephant's legs by direct heat transfer.)


Then again, the high density has another consequence. Even if you hit water at sufficiently high speeds, the impact on the surface will kill you.Yes, TVTropes also has a page on that subject. Apply that to gold, and the result is that if you fall from some height on liquid gold the surface isn't merely "as hard as concrete", but in fact "harder"! And, again contrary to what movies sometimes say, mechanical crushing becomes ever more of a problem, the larger you go, due to the square-cube law. So, if an elephant were to fall onto a lake of gold from, say, 10 metres height, then it would probably die immediately, simply from the shock of hitting the surface.

This doesn't directly apply to the movie scene, since Smaug sits on the ground in front of the liquid-gold statue before it collapses. However, this sheer mechanical power of the high-density liquid would pose a very real problem for any creature in that position: the disintegrating dwarf statue would constitute a tsunami wave that would push stuff out of its way much more powerfully than a comparable water wave. It would not drown the dragon, but push it towards the opposite wall with incredible speed. Impact on that wall then might be rather deadly indeed, certainly for an elphant, man or whatever non-magical creature.

Evidently, dragons have mechanical powers unlike any real lifeform: otherwise they couldn't possibly fly. So they might, in fact, survive a gold tsunami. But at least, the dwarves weren't quite so unrealistic if they hoped in fact to crush the dragon on the opposite wall by that means, rather than actually drowning it in the gold.

22
  • 3
    Lava is not necessarily hotter (800 °C - 1,200 °C) than the melting point of gold (1,064 °C). It certainly is not much hotter. Magma can be hotter with a normal range from 700 °C to 1300 °C with some compositions as low as 600 °C and high as 1600 °C.
    – Makyen
    Commented Feb 2, 2015 at 19:15
  • 1
    A question is also whether his skin needs to let oxygen through. He would not have been the first to die from being painted gold. Has happened in the real world.
    – Misha R
    Commented Feb 3, 2015 at 6:17
  • 1
    @MishaRosnach His relation to frogs is debatable -- it's not stated in the Silmarillion what Glaurung was bred from, and real evolutionary cladistics doesn't necessarily apply to Arda. (Also, in the real world, our separation from frogs -- in terms of millions of years since last common ancestor -- is the same as any reptile's, since our synapsid ancestors and the sauropsid ancestors of extant reptiles diverged after the branching off from amphibians.) Granted, skin-breathing wouldn't require us to be frogs. Being transformed into frogs would be one route toward that condition, however. ;)
    – Jacob C.
    Commented Sep 20, 2017 at 19:25
  • 1
    @Pryftan Well, worm comes from wyrm, which is a term still sometimes used in fantasy when talking about dragons. And wyrm is Germanic, used to refer to snakes, reptiles, etc. From there it wormed its way into Old English, so it's no surprise Tolkien grabbed it. He did like that Old English.
    – Misha R
    Commented Feb 21, 2018 at 1:18
  • 1
    @MishaRosnach Right. As soon as you wrote 'wyrm' I thought immediately of German and you're of course absolutely right. And thanks for the punning; that's something that is always very welcome but esp today.
    – Pryftan
    Commented Feb 21, 2018 at 1:44
9

Smaug, based on his description and key characteristics, is identifiable as a winged "fire-drake" (of the same ilk as Ancalagon the Black) rather than a "cold-drake" or "long-worm".

Given that the breath of a "fire-drake" burned hot enough to destroy a Ring of Power (four of the Seven were lost in this way) and that one "fire-drake" (Ancalagon the Black, mightiest of them) crushes a volcanic peak without Tolkien even bothering to mention the word lava (hotter by far than liquid gold) I think it is safe to assume that Smaug, being a particularly mighty "fire-drake" (a "most specially strong worm" and in fact "the greatest of the dragons of his day"), would be completely unconcerned by molten gold

This scene, I fear, is another instance of needless Hollywood-style dramatics that at best lack grounding and at worst contradict Middle-Earth canon.

2
  • Contradict canon???? How dare they!! Kill them all immediately!!
    – Daft
    Commented Feb 3, 2015 at 10:59
  • @Daft if you'll forgive me - PJ is rather daft. Not insulting you, mind, but merely punning.
    – Pryftan
    Commented Feb 21, 2018 at 0:18
3

The melting point of gold is 1064 degrees Celsius, which is not really all that hot in the grand scheme of the maximum temperatures that medieval style furnaces could operate at (to get molten iron you need 1200 degrees, glass is even higher, steel is 1500+ etc). This is well within the reach of a good human smith (and certainly a master dwarf blacksmith) with a good permanent furnace in universe I would imagine.

So, on the basis that humans and even dwarves could not unmake the rings through fire you would have to imagine that they were simply unable to generate enough heat in their furnaces, yet a dragon could. Let's imagine that you need at least twice as high a temperature as man would manage to melt a ring of power, just for arguments sake, that's a temperature of roughly 3000 degrees assuming steel is the hottest thing man could smelt.

Take into account that a dragon could, and that the dragon fire they could use to destroy a ring would by definition be considerably higher than what man/dwarf could produce (and you would imagine that their internal temperatures would have to be even higher than that of their flames) then this sort of thing, whilst no doubt uncomfortable, painful, restrictive etc, is not a mortal danger to a dragon, being simply not all that hot (a third of the minimum temperature they were capable of producing externally) from the dragons perspective.

3
  • 1
    But then consider that lava ranges from 700 to 1,200 °C at it's hottest, while Iron and Steel is melted at higher temperatures, it all falls apart. Unless Middle Earth volcanos are significantly hotter or Middle Earth Metals have different physical properties and melting points, you need to adjust for magic, not raw temperature.
    – user16696
    Commented Jun 10, 2014 at 1:48
  • 2
    @cde Good points. I'd probably expand by saying a) the internals of a magma chamber would probably be far in excess of what Lava can be when it's managed to get outside, but also b) It might not be that volcanos are hotter in Middle Earth, but perhaps that Mount Doom specifically is hotter. It would be interesting to follow through whether the ring must be destroyed in Mt Doom because that's where it was made, or because that's the only place hot enough to make or subsequently un-make it. Would another volcano work? Are there any others?
    – stuffe
    Commented Jun 10, 2014 at 7:06
  • 1
    If you want to talk about "twice as high of a temperature," you should be using an absolute scale i.e. Kelvin.
    – djechlin
    Commented Feb 2, 2015 at 18:14
2

Dragons are magical creatures, and in Tolkien's works, magic is not based on rules and spells - it is always inherent to people/creatures or objects, and its effects are not well defined or predictable. Conventional physics, chemistry or biology on the other hand, are routinely ignored.

So I think it would be consistent with the way Tolkien wrote his stories to assume that since dragons are creatures of fire, they are at least resistant to fiery things like liquid gold and unlikely to be killed by it.

1

Assuming we believe it makes sense for the gold to neatly fall around Smaug and cover him (which is addressed by the other answers), the problem in the plan is that the pool of gold with Smaug inside couldn't solidify fast enough.

If Smaug could be trapped in a pool of solid gold, he would probably die or stop being a threat anyway.

I've always wondered how much water it would have taken to cool down all that gold. Presumably the dwarves could have emptied a nearby lake, filled the next room with water or whatever, and flooded the gold pool at the same time.

If we assume that the gold was at 1100 °C, a bit above the melting point, that the nearby water is at 20 °C, and that we want to reduce the gold to a mere 100 °C without turning all the water into steam, we can divide the latent heat and specific heat of the gold by the specific heat of the water, which in in kg would make:

( 63.72 kJ/kg + (1100-100 °C) * 0.129 kj/kg-K ) / ( ( 100-20 °C ) * 4.186 kJ/kg-K ) = 0.575

So it would take less than 0.6 kg of water for every 1 kg of gold. Liquid gold is approximately 17.3 times as dense as water, so that neatly translates to about 10 m³ of water for every 1 m³ of gold.

It's not clear how much gold there is, but the gold pool is shown to neatly fill the bottom of the hall, which is shown a moment before to have just 6 steps. So maybe 2 meters? (Absurd that Smaug fits in just 2 meters of height.) In which case you'd need to fill the room with some 20 m of water.

The heat of vaporization for water is a fancy 2257 kJ/kg, or 6.7 times what the specific heat gives us above, so if we let all the water go into steam then you "only" need a volume of water 3 times as big as the gold. You'd definitely have to escape quick enough to avoid getting quickly cooked like vermicelli rice in a steam cooker...

2
  • 1
    So, could it kill Smaug or not? You’ve gone into some nice analysis of if the actual gold melting/solidifying part is possible but you’ve not really answered the question if I’m reading it correctly.
    – TheLethalCarrot
    Commented Jul 17, 2020 at 21:54
  • @TheLethalCarrot Thanks for the comment. I made it more explicit now. It also depends on whether Smaug can do without breathing and/or can produce fire while engulfed in gold.
    – Nemo
    Commented Jul 20, 2020 at 7:17
-2

he did show signs of pain, but probably more along the lines of one of us dumb humans sticking their hand in hot water straight out of the facet, 'ouch it stings and burns and its bloody hot' but the worst we really end up with is reddened skin unless of course it happens to be boiling/scalding... which it was probably on the lesser end for Smaug the awesome.

so yeah, it just pissed him off more than he already was.

1
  • 4
    This looks more like a comment then an answer. It does not actually provide an answer to the question. Commented Dec 27, 2013 at 11:49

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.