Dictionary Definition
tarmac
Noun
1 a paving material of tar and broken stone;
mixed in a factory and shaped during paving [syn: tarmacadam]
2 a paved surface having compressed layers of
broken rocks held together with tar [syn: tarmacadam, macadam] v : surface with
macadam; "macadam the road" [syn: macadamize, macadamise]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
Shortened form of tarmacadam, tar + macadam (crushed stones).Noun
tarmacUsage notes
The tarmac are any areas of an airfield that are paved. It is often used to describe planes that are sitting still on a paved road surface due to some sort of delay.Translations
- Finnish: öljysora (1), asfaltti (1), bitumisora (1)
- Japanese: ターマック (tāmakku)
Extensive Definition
Tarmac (short for tarmacadam, a portmanteau for tar-penetration macadam) is a type of highway
surface, pioneered by John
Loudon McAdam in around 1820. Strictly
speaking, Tarmac refers to a material patented by Edgar
Purnell Hooley in 1901. The term is also
used, with varying degrees of correctness, for a variety of other
materials, including tar-grouted macadam, Tarvia,
bituminous surface treatments and even modern asphalt
concrete.
Origins
Macadamized
roads were adequate for use by horses and carriages or coaches, but
they were very dusty, subject to erosion with heavy rain and did
not hold up to higher speed motor vehicle use. Methods to stabilise
macadam roads with tar date back to at least 1834, when Henry
Cassell patented "Pitch Macadam". This method involved spreading
tar on the subgrade,
then placing a typical macadam layer and then sealing the macadam
with a mixture of tar and sand. Tar-grouted macadam was also in use
well before 1900, and involved scarifying the surface of an
existing macadam pavement, spreading tar and re-compacting.
Hooley's patent for Tarmac involved mechanically mixing tar and
aggregate prior to lay-down, and then compacting the mixture with a
steam roller. The
tar was modified with the addition of small amounts of Portland
cement, resin and
pitch.
Later developments
As petroleum production
increased, the by-product asphalt became available in huge
quantities and largely supplanted tar due to its reduced
temperature sensitivity. The Macadam construction process also
became quickly obsolete due to its high manual labour requirement;
however, the somewhat similar tar and chip method, also known as
bituminous surface treatment (BST), remains popular.
While the specific Tarmac pavement is not common
in some countries today, many people use the word to refer to
generic paved areas at airports, especially the
airport
ramp or "apron", near the terminals
despite the fact that many of these areas are in fact made of
concrete. This term
seems to have been popularised when it became part of the news
lexicon following live coverage of the Entebbe
hijacking in 1976, where "Tarmac" was frequently used by the
on-scene BBC
reporter in describing the hijack scene. The Wick Airport
at Wick in
Caithness,
Scotland
is one of the few airports that still has a real Tarmac
runway.
Patents
- Hooley, E. Purnell, , "Apparatus for the preparation of tar macadam", July 26, 1904.
tarmac in Finnish: Öljysora
tarmac in French: Tarmac
tarmac in Japanese: ターマック