Hi RD
its actually simple...   
1)  Wootz damascus is a crucible steel...   some ingredients are melted in a clay crucible till liquid then cooled slowly in the vessel.  The goal is to produce a ultra high carbon, dendritic steel.  The ingot is then forged out into a blade using a low forge temp inorder to grow the carbide pattern.  The blade is then etched and you see the waterings
2) Forgewelded damascus-   several pieces of bloom steel are stacked up in a billet... (resembling a sandwich) the billet is then fluxed and forgewelded together and drawn out ....  cut... restacked and repeat
- pattern is then manipulated and designs are made
- eg...like those Viking sword with twistcore  
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					Originally Posted by RDGAC
					
				 Any and all. I address this to everyone, actually: in essence, I'm very, very confused about Damascus and wootz, the relationships between the two, and how one tells the various varieties apart. My ignorance is doubtless, which is annoying since I've a watered barrel of some sort propped up in a tube behind my right shoulder!
 - Meredydd
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