Dictionary Definition
bluestone n : bluish-gray sandstone used for
paving and building
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- A form of dolerite which appears blue when wet or freshly broken.
- Any of several massive stones used to construct Stonehenge.
Translations
- Polish: doleryt
Extensive Definition
Bluestone is the name given to several stones:
(1) a feldspathic sandstone in the U.S., (2) a form of dolerite which appears blue
when wet or freshly broken in Britain, and (3) a basalt or olivene
basalt in Australia.
In the United Kingdom
British bluestone is a dolerite, and is currently used to make jewelry or knick-knacks.Bluestone is an evenly-bedded product which tends
to exhibit natural horizontal clefts allowing it to be removed in
large flat sections suitable for flagstone, curbing, and the like.
Where the clefts are less well defined, the stone is removed in
blocks which are then taken to processors for cutting and
refining.
The refining process for bluestone slabs is
called spalling. This process incorporates water and heat to reveal
the natural layers of the stone as it was deposited originally. The
cutting orientation must be almost exactly along the horizontal
layers. The cut slab surface is soaked with water and heated
rapidly with a wide nozzle propane torch, breaking off chips of
stone along their fault lines.
The bluestones at Stonehenge were
placed there during the third phase of construction at Stonehenge
around 2600
BC. It is assumed that there were about 80 of them originally,
but this has never been proven. The stones weigh about 4 tons each.
They are believed to have been brought from the Preseli
Hills, about 250 miles away in Wales, either through glaciation
(erratic theory) or through humans organizing their transportation.
If a glacier transported the stones, then it must have been the
Irish Sea
Glacier. Recently the archaeological find of the Boscombe
Bowmen has been cited in support of the latter theory, but
there is absolutely nothing, in the opinion of some geologists, to
connect the finds with Wales in preference to any other European
area of Palaeozoic rocks. Preseli Bluestone dolerite axe heads have
been found around the Preseli Hills as well, indicating that there
was a population who knew how to work with the stones (see N P
Figgis Prehistoric Preseli). There is also a legend of Merlin having
miraculously transported the stones himself.
The term 'Preseli Bluestone' is quarryman's name
for a whole variety of rock types and strictly is not a
petrographic name. At Stonehenge, there are two types of dolerite -
spotted and unspotted. The dolerite of the Preselis are plagioclase
feldspar. There is no
evidence in Pembrokeshire that spotted dolerite (or any dolerite,
for that matter) was used preferentially either for the building of
monuments or burial chambers (cromlechs), or for the manufacture of
axes. The bluestones may not even have been used preferentially at
Stonehenge, and around half of the original stones used in the
"bluestone setting" were probably sarsen stones which were later
used as lintels.
In the United States
American bluestone is a feldspathic sandstone, which is produced by about 150 mostly small quarries in adjacent areas of Pennsylvania and New York. The Pennsylvania Bluestone Association has 105 members, the vast majority of them quarriers.Bluestone from Pennsylvania
and New
York is commercially known as bluestone or Pennsylvania
Bluestone. These are a group of sandstones defined as feldspathic greywacke. The sand-sized
grains from which bluestone is constituted were deposited in the
"Catskill Delta" during the Middle to Upper Devonian
Period of the Paleozoic
Era, approximately 370 to 345 million years ago. If the initial
deposit was made under slow moving water the ripples of the water
action on the sand or mud will be revealed. This deposition process
may be seen today at any ocean beach in shallow water or in a
stream bed where conditions allow it to be observed. The term
"bluestone" is derived from a deep-blue-colored sandstone first
found in Ulster
County, New York.
The Catskill Delta was created from run off from
the Acadian Mountains ("Ancestral Appalachians") which covered the
area where New York City now exists. This Delta ran in a narrow
band from southwest to northeast and today provides the base
material for the high-quality bluestone which is quarried from the
Catskill
Mountains (and Northeast Pennsylvania).
As the product became more popular as an
architectural and building stone and demand grew, quarrying for it
spread throughout south central New York and northeast
Pennsylvania. It is a unique commodity of particular value to the
economy of
Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania.
This bluestone is made into products as follows:
The bluestone is separated from the rock (quarry face) in the quarry by
parallel cuts with saws with diamond-tipped blades into large
rectangular blocks. Sometimes the stone is lightly blasted to
encourage splitting along parallel planes of weakness, delineating
the top and bottom of the block. The final products are often made
in the quarry, but sometimes massive blocks are trucked to "saw
shops" to be finished there, by sawing, by "snapping" or breaking
the stone with a guillotine along a line of pressure points, or by
splitting along planes of weakness.
The largest volume product is ordinary
irregularly-edged flagstone, followed by ashlar. Flagstone belongs
to a group of products that require no (or very little) sawing,
such as rubble masonry and landscape stone. Two other product
groups are classified as Architectural Stone, one group that
requires some sawing or "snapping" such as paving stone, wall
stone, ashlar, bridge stone, and curbing, and the other group that
requires sawing on all surfaces, such as countertops, stair treads,
lintels, thresholds, ashlar, sidewalks, and residential walls
(veneer). The ashlar can be sawn on all six surfaces, or "snapped"
on one or more surfaces with the remaining surfaces sawn.
External links
In Australia
Australian bluestone is a basalt or olivene basalt, and is quarried by one full-time producer and one part-time producer.In Victoria,
Australia, bluestone was one of the favoured building materials
of the 1850s during the Victorian
Gold Rush.
In Melbourne it was
extracted from a quarry in the Clifton
Hill area and used extensively in the 19th
century. Because the material was difficult to carve, it was
predominantly used for warehouses and the foundations of public
buildings. Significant bluestone buildings include the Melbourne
Gaol, HM
Prison Pentridge,
St Patrick's Cathedral,
Victoria Barracks, Melbourne
Grammar School, Deaf
Children Australia and
Victorian College for the Deaf,
Royal Victorian College for the Blind, the Goldsborough Mort
warehouses (Bourke
Street) and Timeball
Tower. It was also used extensively for cobblestone roads, many
which still exist in some of
Melbourne's smaller lanes as well as walls, bridges, curbs and
gutters in many of the inner suburbs. Some examples of structures
that use the material include Princes
Bridge and Federation Wharf and Hawthorn
Bridge. Because of its distinctive qualities, post-modern
Melbourne buildings have also made use of nostalgic bluestone,
including the Southgate complex and promenade in Southbank,
Victoria and apartments such as the Melburnian.
It was also sourced in many other regions of the
Victorian volcanic plains and used in towns and cities of central
and western regions including Ballarat, Geelong, Port Fairy and
Portland.
References
External links
- Examination of the conflicting theories relating to the Stonehenge bluestones
- Enigma of the Stonehenge Bluestones and the Preseli Hills
- Wessex Archaeology's Bluestone information
- How American bluestone is quarried
- Pennsylvanian bluestone
- AGI Trade Solutions in naturalstone
- Article on Cultured Bluestone
bluestone in Welsh: Carreg las