- A -
Abrasive finish
— a flat non-reflective surface finish for marble.
Abutment — a solid
stone springer at the lowest point of an arch or vault.
Adhered — veneer
secured and supported through adhesion to an approved bonding material applied over
an approved backing.
Agate — a variegated
variety of quartz showing colored bands or other markings (clouded. Moss-like etc)
Anchors — types
for stonework include those made of flat stock (strap, cramps, dovetails, dowel,
strap and dowel and two-way anchors) and round stock (rod cramp, rod anchor, eyebolt
and dowel, flat-hood wall the and dowel and wire toggle bolt.
Arch — a curved
stone structure resting on supports at both extremities used to sustain weight,
to bridge or roof open space.
Architrave — the
member of an entablature resting on the capitals of columns and supporting the frieze.
Argillite — a compact
sedimentary rock composed mainly of clay and aluminium silicate minerals.
Arkose — a sandstone
containing 10 per cent or more clastic grains of feldspar. Also called arkosic sandstone,
feldspathick sandstone.
Arris — a natural
or applied line on the stone from which all levelling and plumbing is measured.
Ahslar — masonry
having a face of square or rectangular stones, either smooth or textured.
- B -
Back arch —
a concealed arch carrying the backing of a wall where the exterior facing is carried
by lintel.
Baluster — a dense
textured (aphanitic), igneous rock relatively high in iron and magnesia minerals
and relatively low in silica, generally dark grey to black and feldspatic; a general
term in contradistinction to felsite. A light-coloured feldspatic and highly siliceous
rock of similar texture and origin.
Bed — the top or
bottom of a joint, natural bed; surface or stone parallel to its stratification.
Bed — In granites
and marbles, a layer or sheet of the rock mass that is horizontal, commonly curved
and lenticular, as developed by fractures. Sometime applied also to the surface
of parting between sheets.
Bed (1) — In stratified
rocks the unit layer formed by sedimentation; of variable thickness, and commonly
titled or distorted by subsequent deformation; generally develops a rock cleavage;
parting, or jointing along the planes of stratification.
Belt course — a
continuous horizontal course of flat stones placed in line marking a division in
the wall plane.
Bevel — when the
angle between two sides is greater or less than a right angle.
Bluestone — a dense,
hard, fine-grained, commonly feldspatic sandstone or siltstone of medium to dark
or bluish-grey colour that splits readily along original bedding planes to form
thin slabs, Bluestone is not a technical geologic term. It is considered to be a
variety of flagstones, the thin relatively smooth-surfaced slabs being suitable
for use as flagging. The term has been applied particularly to sandstone of Devonian
age that are being or have been quarried in eastern New York and Pennsylvania and
in western New Jersey, but similar stones that occur elsewhere may be included.
It has also been applied in places to thinly layered gneisses and schist that can
be split and used as flagging, but such stones are not properly embraced by this
definition although they may be marketed properly as flagstone.
Bond stone — used
in varying percentages to anchor or bond the stone veneer to the backing material.
Bond stones are generally cut to twice the bed thickness of the material being used.
Border stone —
usually a flat stone used as an edging material. A border stone is generally used
to retain the field of the terrace of platform.
Box — a tapered
metal box wedged in the top of columns or other heavy stones for hoisting.
Broach — to drill
or cut out material left between closely spaced drill holes; a mason's sharp-pointed
chisel for dressing stone; an inclined piece of masonry filling the triangular space
between the base of an octagonal spire and the top of a square tower; a type of
chisel used for working narrow surfaces.
Brownstone — sandstone
of characteristic brown or reddish-brown colour that is due to a prominent amount
of iron oxide, as interstitial material.
Brushed finish
— Obtained by brushing the stone with a coarse rotary-type wire brush.
Building stone, natural
— rock material in its natural state of composition and aggregation as it exists
in the quarry and is usable in construction as dimension building stone.
Bull nose — convex
rounding of a stone member, such as a stair tread.
- C -
Calcarenite —
limestone composed predominantly of clastic sand-size grains of calcite, or rarely
aragonite, usually as fragments of shells or other skeletal structures. Some calcarenite
contain oolites (small, spherical grains of calcium carbonate that resemble roe)
and may be termed oolite limestone. Calcareous sandstone, in which the calcium carbonate
is present chiefly as bonding material, are not included in this category.
Calcite limestone
— a limestone containing not more than five per cent of magnesium carbonate.
Calcite streaks
— description of a white or milky-like streak occurring in stone. It is a joint
plane usually wider than a glass seam and has been re-cemented by deposition of
calcite in the crack and is structurally sound.
Canopy — a sheltering
roof, as over a niche or a doorway.
Capital — the culminating
stone at the top of a column or pilaster often richly carved.
Carve — shaping,
by cutting a design to form the trade of a sculptor.
Caulking — making
a marble joint tight or leak-proof by sealing with an elastic adhesive compound.
Cavity vent — an
opening in joints of masonry to allow the passage of air and moisture from the wall
cavity to the exterior.
Cement putty —
a thick, creamy mixture made with pure cement and water which is used to strengthen
the bond between the store and the setting bed, also called cement butter cement
cream.
Chamfer — to bevel
the junction of an exterior angle.
Chat-sawn finish
— a rough gangsaw finish produced by sawing with coarse chat.
Cladding — non-loadbearing
stone used as the facing material in wall construction that contains other materials.
Cleavage — the
ability of a rock mass to break along natural surfaces; a surface of natural parting.
Cleavage plane
— plane or planes along which a stone may likely break or de-laminate.
Coating — a protective
or decorative converting applied to the surface or impregnated into stone for such
purposes as waterproofing enhancing resistance to weathering, wear, and chemical
action, or improving appearance of the stone.
Cobblestone — a
natural rounded stone, large enough for use in paving; commonly used to describe
paving blocks, usually granite, generally cut to rectangular shapes.
Commercial marble
— a crystalline rock composed predominantly of calcite dolomite and/or serpentine,
and capable of taking a polish.
Composite — a construction
unit in which stone that is to be exposed in the final use is permanently bonded
or joined to other material, which may be stone or manufactured material, that will
be concealed.
Contraction joint
— spaces where panels are joined and which expand as the panels contract.
Control joint —
provision for the dimensional change of different parts of a structure due to shrinkage,
expansion, temperature variation or other causes so as to avoid the development
of high stresses.
Coping — a flat
stone used as a cap on freestanding walls.
Coquina —limestone
composed predominantly of unaltered shells or fragments of shells loosely cemented
by calcite, generally very coarse-textured with a high porosity. The term has been
applied principally to a very porous shell rock of Eocene age that has been quarried
in Florida.
Corbel plates —
plates of non-ferrous metal fixed into a structure to support stone cladding at
intervals and over opening in such a way as not to be visible.
Cornerstone — a
stone forming a part of a corner or angle in a wall. Also a stone laid at the formal
inauguration of the erection of a building, not necessarily at a corner, usually
incorporating a date or inscription.
Cornice — a moulded
projecting stone at the top of an entablature.
Course — a horizontal
range of stone units the length of the wall.
Coursed veneer
— this is achieved by using stones of the same or approximately the same height.
Horizontal joints run the entire length of the veneered area. Vertical joins are
constantly broken so that no two joints will be over one another.
Crack — a break,
split, fracture, fissure, separation, cleavage or elongated narrow opening, however
caused, visible without magnification to the human eye and extending from the surface
into the stone, that must extend through the grain or matrix.
Cross bedding —
the arrangement of laminations of strata transverse or oblique to the main planes
of stratification.
Crowfoot (styoite)
— description of a dark grey to black zigzag marking occurring in stone. Usually
structurally sound.
Crystalline limestone
— a limestone, either calcitic or dolomitic, composed of interlocking crystalline
grains of the constituent minerals and of phaneritic texture; commonly used synonymously
with marble an thus representing a re-crystallised limestone; improperly applied
to limestone that display some obviously crystalline grains in a fine-grained mass
but which are not of interlocking texture and do not compose the entire mass. Note:
All limestone are microscopically, or in part megascopically, crystalline; the term
is thus confusing but should be restricted to stones that are completely crystalline
and of megascopic and interlocking texture and that may be classed as marbles.)
Curbing — slabs
and blocks of stone bordering streets, walks, etc.
Cut stone — stone
fabricated to specific dimensions
Cutting stock —
a term used to describe slabs of varying size, finish and thickness which are used
in fabricating tread, risers, copings, borders, sills, stools, hearths, mantels,
and other special purpose stones.
- D -
Dacite —
a fine-grained, extrusive (volcanic) rock, intermediate in colour and composition
between basalt and rhyolite.
Damp proofing —
one or more coating of a compound that is impervious to water applied to a surface
above grade.
Defect — those
features, which affect or have the potential of affecting the structural soundness
of building stone, or may affect the durability of the building stone. Sometimes
used for visual features such as xenoliths or veins.
Dentil — Blocks
projections on an entablature.
Dentil course —
the lower part of the cornice with dentils. The cornice is jointed to allow machine
production of the dentils.
Dentil — small,
rectangular blocks under a classical cornice, resembling a row of teeth.
Dimension stone
— natural building stone that has been selected, trimmed of cut to specified or
indicated shapes or sizes with or without one or more mechanically dressed surfaces.
Dolomitic limestone
— a limestone rich in magnesium carbonate, frequently somewhat crystalline in character,
found in ledge formations in a wide variety of colour tones and textures. Generally
speaking, its crushing and tensile strengths are greater than the oolitic limestone
and its appearance shows greater variety in texture.
Dowel — a short
piece of non-ferrous metal or slate fixed into a mortise or sinking in the joints
of adjoining stones to prevent movement.
Dressed or handed-dressed
— the cutting of rough chunks of stone by hand to create a square or rectangular
shape. A stone that is sold as dressed stone generally refers to stone ready for
installation. Sometimes called scabbling.
Drip — a recess
cut under a sill or projecting stone to throw off water, preventing it from running
down the face of the wall or other surface, such as a window or door.
Dripstone — a projecting
moulding over the heads of doorways, windows and archways to throw off the rain.
Also known as a "hoodmould" and, when rectangular, as a "label".
Dry — an open or
unhealed joint plane not filled with calcite and not structurally sound.
Dry wall — a dry
wall is a stone wall that is constructed one stone upon the other without the use
of any mortar. Generally used for retaining walls.
Durability — the
measure of the ability of natural building stone to endure and to maintain its essential
and distinctive characteristics of strength, resistance to decay, and appearance,
with relation to a specific manner, purpose, and environment of use.
- E -
Efflorescence
— a crystalline deposit appearing on stone surfaces typically caused by
soluble salts carried through or onto the stone by moisture, which has sometimes
been found to come from brick, tile, concrete blocks, cement, mortar, concrete,
and similar materials in the wall or above.
Entablature — in
classical architecture, the upper part of an order, comprising architrave, frieze,
and cornice.
Entasis — the curve
of the upper two-thirds of a column.
Expansion bolt
— a socket that grips a drilled hole in stone by expanding as the bolt is screwed
into it.
Expansion-contraction
joint — a joint between marble units designed to expand or contract with temperature
changes. An expansion joint compresses as panels expand.
Exposed aggregate
— phrase applied to the larger pieces of stone aggregate purposefully exposed for
their colour and texture in a cast slab.
Face — this refers
to the exposed portion of stone. The word "face" can also be used when referring
to the edge treatment on various cutting stock materials.
Fascia — a horizontal
belt or vertical faces; often used in combination with mouldings.
- F -
Ferriginous —
limestone or sandstone containing a high proportion of iron oxide.
Field stone — loose
blocks separated from ledges by natural processes and scattered through or upon
the regolith ("soil") cover, applied also to similar transported materials, such
as glacial boulders and cobbles.
Filling — a trade
expression used in the fabrication of marble to indicate the filling of natural
voids with cements, shellac or synthetic resins and similar materials.
Fines — the powder,
dust, silt-size and sand-size material resulting from processing (usually crushing)
rock.
Finish — final
surface applied to the face of stone during fabrication.
Finished stone
— building stone with one or more mechanically dressed surfaces.
Fireproof — relatively
incombustible.
Flagstone — thin
slabs of stone used for flagging or paving walks, driveways, patios, etc. It is
generally fine-grained sandstone, bluestone, quartzite or slate, but thin slabs
of other stones may be used.
Fleuri cut — cutting
quarried marble or stone parallel to the natural bedding plane.
Flooring — stone
used as an interior pedestrian wearing surface.
Fracture — a break
in rock produced by mechanical failure. Fractures include faults and joints.
Freestone — a stone
that may be cut freely in any direction without fracture or splitting.
- G -
Gangsawed —
description of the granular surface of stone resulting from gangsawing alone.
Gauged or gauging
— a grinding process to make all pieces of material to be used together the same
thickness.
Glass seam — description
of a narrow glass-like streak occurring in stone; a joint plane that has been re-cemented
by deposition of translucent calcite in the crack and structurally sound.
Grade course —
beginning course at the grade level, generally waterproofed with a damp check or
damp course.
Grain — the easiest
cleavage direction in a stone. "With the grain" same as "natural bed." Also, particles
(crystals, sand grains, etc.) of rock.
Granite — a fine
to coarse-grained, igneous rock formed by volcanic action consisting of quartz,
feldspar, and mica, with accessory minerals. Granite-type rocks included those of
similar texture and origin.
Granite (scientific
definition) — a visibly granular, crystalline rock of predominantly interlocking
texture, composed essentially of alkalic feldspars and quartz; this is true granite.
Feldspar is generally present in excess of quartz, and accessory minerals (chiefly
micas, hornblende, or more rarely pyroxene) are commonly present. The alkalic feldspars
may be present (1) as individual mineral species (2) as isomorphous or mechanical
intergrowths with each other or (3) as chemical intergrowths with the lime feldspar
molecule, but 80 + 3% of the feldspar must be composed of the potash or soda feldspar
molecules.
Granite (commercial/building
use) — a term that includes granite (as defined above), gneiss, gneissic granite,
granite gneiss, and the rock species known to petrologists as syenite, monzonite,
and granodiorite, species intermediate between them, the gneissic varieties and
gneisses of corresponding mineralogic compositions and the mineralogic compositions
and the corresponding varieties of porphyritic textures. The term commercial granite
shall also include other feldspatic crystalline rocks of similar textures, containing
minor amounts of accessory minerals, used for special decorative purposes, and known
to petrologists as anorthosite and laurvikite.
Granite gneiss
— a foliated crystalline rock composed essentially of silicate minerals with interlocking
and visibly granular texture, and in which the foliation is due primarily to alternating
layers, regular or irregular, of contrasting mineralogic composition. In general,
gneiss is characterised by relatively thick layers as compared with schist. According
to their mineralogic compositions, gneisses may correspond to other rocks of crystalline,
visibly granular, interlocking texture, such as those included under the definition
of commercial granite, and may then be known as granite gneiss if strongly foliated,
or gneissic granite if weakly foliated.
- Black granite —
rock species known to petrologists as diabase, diorite, gabbro, and intermediate
varieties are sometimes quarried as building stone, chiefly for ornamental use,
and sold as "black granite". As dimension blocks of slabs, they are valued specifically
for their dark grey to black colour when polished. Scientifically, they are far
removed in composition form true granites though they may be satisfactorily used
for some of the purposes to which commercial granite are adapted. They posses as
interlocking crystalline texture, but unlike granite, they contain little or no
quartz or alkalic feldspar, and are characterised by an abundance of one or more
of the common black rock-forming minerals (chiefly pyroxenes, hornblende, and biotite).
Granular — having
a texture characterised by particles that are apparent to the unaided eye. For sedimentary
rocks: particles less than 4 inches (10mm) in diameter and approximately in size.
Greenstone — includes
stone that have been metamorphosed or otherwise changed so that they have assumed
a distinctive greenish colour owing to the presence of one or more of the following
minerals: chlorite, epidote, or actinolite.
Greenstone is an
old field term applied to metamorphosed igneous rock of mafic or ultramafic (low
silica) composition (i.e., basalt, diabase, gabbro, peridotite and serpentinite).
- Greenstone derived
from basalt and other dark volcanic rocks consists dominantly of epidote, actinolite
and plagioclase. No present commercial production such rocks is known. Peridotite
consist dominantly of olivine and pyroxene.
- Serpentine consist
largely of talc, chlorite, and serpentine; further alteration may result in soapstone.
Grout — mortar
of pouring consistency. Coarse grout, used for wide grout spaces 2 inches (5cm)
or more, consist of one part Portland cement, not more than two to three parts sand,
and not more than two parts pea gravel. Fine grout, used in narrow grout spaces,
consist of one part Portland cement and two-and-one quarter to three parts sand.
- H -
Hand-cut random
rectangular ashlar — a pattern where all the stone is hand cut into squares
and rectangulars. Joints are fairly consistent similar to sawed-bed ashlar in appearance.
Hand or machine pitch-faced
(rock-faced) ashlar — a finish given to both veneer stone and cutting stock. Establishing
a straight line back from the irregular face of the stone creates this. Proper tools
are then used to cut along the line, leaving a straight arris and the intended rustic
finish on the face.
Head — the end
of a stone that has been tooled to march the face of the stone. Heads are used at
outside corners, windows, doorjambs, or any place where the veneering will be visible
from the side.
Hearth — that part
of the floor of a fireplace of stone on which the fire is laid.
Hearth stone —
originally the single large stone or stones used for the hearth, now most commonly
used to describe the stone in of the fire chamber and many times extending on either
or both sides of the front of the fire chamber.
Holes — sinkages
in the top beds of stones to engage Lewis pins for hoisting.
Honed finish —
honed is a super fine smooth finish, thought not as fine as a polished finish.
- I -
Igneous —
one of the three great classes of rock (igneous, sedimentary and metamorphic) solidified
from molten state, as granite and lavas.
Incise — to cut
inwardly or engrave, as in an inscription.
Inscription — lettering
cut in stone.
- J -
Jack arch —
one having horizontal or nearly horizontal upper and lower surfaces. Also called
flat or straight arch.
Joint — the space
between stone units, usually filled with mortar.
Jointing scheme
— architects drawing detailing dimensions, location and configuration of marble
units and joints as related to the structure.
Jumper — in ashlar
patterns, a piece of stone of higher rise than adjacent stones which is used to
end a horizontal mortar joint at the point where it is set.
- K -
Keystone —
the last wedge-shaped stone placed in the crown of an arch regarded as binding the
whole.
- L -
Lava —
a general term applied to igneous rocks, such as basalt and rhyolite, that erupted
from the earth by volcanic action.
Lead buttons —
lead spacers in the solid horizontal joints to support the top stones until the
mortar has set.
Lewis holes — holes
in cut stones for lifting and support during setting of cut stones and sometimes
for permanent support. Holes are checked for the particular Lewis lifting device
or hook to be used.
Limestone — a sedimentary
rock composed of calcium carbonate; includes many varieties (see oolitic limestone,
dolomitic limestone, crystalline limestone.) Limestones that contain not more than
five per cent magnesium carbonate may be termed calcite limestone, as distinguished
from those that contain between five and 40% as the mineral dolomite (dolostone,
formerly known as the rock dolomite). Recrystallized limestones and compact, dense,
relatively pure microcrystalline varieties that are capable of taking a polish are
included in commercial marbles.
Liners — structurally
sound sections of marble that are cemented to the back of marble veneer slabs to
give greater strength, additional bearing surface, or to increase joint depth.
Lintel — the block
of stone spanning the top of an opening such as a doorway or window; sometimes called
a head.
Lipping — usually
refers to flagging materials; caused when two pieces of material to be joined together
are slightly warped or twisted causing one of more edges to be higher or lower than
the adjoining material.
Lug sill — a stone
sill set into the jambs on each side of masonry opening.
- M -
Machine finish
— literally, badlands; refers to dark-coloured rock, commonly lava, in
rough terrain. As defined for architectural use: calcium carbonate with other components
which give it colour, markings and texture suitable as a desirable building stone.
Marble (scientific
definition) — a metamorphic (recrystallized limestone composed predominantly of
crystalline grains of calcite or dolomite, or both, having interlocking or mosaic
texture, marble that contains less than 5% magnesium carbonate may be termed calcite
marble; from 5 to 40 % magnesium carbonate, magnesium carbonate, magnesium or dolomite
marble. These limiting values are, however, not strictly established in petrologic
science and are used herein as arbitrary limits.
- Onyx — so called
in trade, is a crystalline form, commonly micro crystalline, of calcium carbonate
deposited usually from cold-water solutions. It is generally translucent and shows
a characteristic layering, the term onyx marble is technically a misnomer, as true
onyx is a variety of cryptocrystalline fibrous silica (chalcedony), and is closely
related in form and origin to agate.
- Serpentine
— marble characterised by a prominent amount of the mineral serpentine.
- Travertine
— a form of limestone precipitated from ground waters as in caves or in orifices
of springs (see limestone).
- Verde antique
— a commercial marble composed chiefly of massive serpentine and capable of taking
a high degree of polish. Verde antique is not a true marble in the scientific sense
but is commonly sold as a decorative commercial marble and requires the adjective
modifier Verde (or verd) antique. Verde antique is commonly veined with carbonate
minerals, chiefly calcite and dolomite.
Masonry — built
up construction , usually of a combination of materials set in mortar.
Metamorphism —
the change or alteration in a rock cause by exterior agencies such as deep-seated
heat and pressure, or intrusion or rock materials.
Miter — the junction
of two units at an angle of which the junction lines usually bisect on a 450 angle.
Modular multiple-cut
(pattern-cut) — this refers to standard pattern used throughout the stone industry.
These patterns are usually based on multiples of a given height. Stone that is multiple
cut or pattern cut is pre-cut to allow typically for ¼ — ½ inch (6 or 13mm) joints
or beds.
Mouldings — decorative
stone deviating from a plane surface by projections, curved profiles, recesses or
any combination thereof.
Mortar — a plastic
mixture of cement, lime, sand, and water used to bond masonry units.
Mosaic — a veneering
which is generally irregular with no definite pattern. Nearly all the stone used
in a mosaic pattern is irregular in shape.
- N -
Natural Bed —
the Setting of the stone on the same plane as it was formed in the ground.
This generally applies to all stratified materials.
Natural cleft —
this generally pertains to stones which are formed in layers in the ground, When
such stones are cleaved or separated along a natural seam the remaining surface
is referred to as a natural cleft surface.
Non-Staining mortar
— Mortar composed of materials which individually or collectively do not contain
material that will stain, usually having a very low alkali content.
- O -
Obsidian —
a glassy phase of lava.
Onyx marble — A
dense, crystalline form of lime carbonate deposited usually from cold-water solutions.
Generally translucent and showing a characteristic layering due to mode of accumulation.
Oolitic limestone
— A calcite-cemented calcareous stone formed of shells and shell fragments, practically
non-crystalline in character. It is found in massive deposits located almost entirely
in Lawrence, Monroe, and Owen Counties, IN, and Alabama, Kansas, and Texas. This
limestone is characteristically freestone, without cleavage planes, possessing a
remarkable uniformity of composition, texture and structure, It possesses a high
internal elasticity, adapting itself without damage to extreme temperature changes.
Opalized — The
introduction into a rock of siliceous material in the form of opal, hydrous silicate.
Out of wind — The
be out of wind is to have the arris of the stone not in parallel or perpendicular
lines. Stone that is out of wind has an irregular or rustic appearance.
- P -
Palletised —
A system of stacking stone on wooden pallets. Stone, which comes palletised, is
easily moved and transported by modern handling equipment. Palletised stone generally
arrives at the job site in better condition than UN-palletised material.
Panel — A finished
stone unit used on walls.
Parapet wall —
That part of any wall entirely above the roofline.
Parging — Damp-proofing
by placing a coast of ½ inch (13mm) setting mortar to the back of stones or the
face of the back-up material.
Parquetry — An
inlay of stone floors in stones or the face of back-up material.
Paving — Stone
used as an exterior-wearing surface, as in patios, walkways, driveways, etc. (see
flooring).
Perforated wall
— One that contains a considerable number of relatively small openings, often called
pierced wall or screen wall.
Perrons — Slabs
of stone set on other stones serving as steps and arches in gardens.
Phenocryst — In
igneous rocks, the relatively large and conspicuous crystals in a finer-grained
matrix or ground mass.
Pilaster — An engaged
pier of shallow depth. In classical architecture, it follows the height and width
of related columns, with similar base and cap.
Pitched stone —
Stone having arris clearly defined; face, however, is roughly cut with pitching
chisel used along the line that becomes the arris.
Plinths — The lower
square part of the base of a column. A square base or a lower block, as of a pedestal,
The base block at the juncture or baseboard and trim around an opening.
Plucked finish
— Obtained by rough-planing the surface of stone, breaking or plucking out small
particles to give rough texture.
Pointing — The
final filling and finishing of mortar joints that have been raked out.
Polished finish
— The finest and smoothest finish available in stone characterised by a high lustre
(gloss) and strong reflection of incident light, generally only possible on hard,
dense materials.
Porphyry — An igneous
rock in which relatively large and conspicuous crystal (Phenocryst) are set in a
matrix of finer crystals.
Pressure relieving
joint — An open horizontal joint below the supporting angle or hanger located
at approximately every floor line and not over 15 feet (4.6m) apart horizontally
and every 20 to 30 feet (6 to 9m) vertically to prevent the weight from being transmitted
to the masonry below, These joints are to be caulked with a resilient non-staining
material to prevent moisture penetration.
Processing — The
work involved in transforming building stone from quarry blocks to cut or finished
stone. This includes primary sawing into slabs, It may also include both hand and
mechanical techniques such as sawing, drilling, grinding, honing, polishing and
carving.
Projections — This
refers to the pulling out of stones in a wall to give an effect of ruggedness. The
amount each stone is pulled out can vary between ½ and 1-½ inches (1.3 to 3.8 cm).
Stones are either pulled out at the same degree at both ends or sometimes one end
is pulled out, leaving the other end flush with the majority of the veneer.
Pumice — An exceptionally
cellular, glassy lava resembling a solid froth.
- Q -
Quarry —
The location of an operation where a natural deposit f stone is removed from the
ground.
Quartz — A silicon
dioxide mineral that occurs in colourless and transparent or coloured hexagonal
crystals and also in crystalline masses. One of the most common minerals, the chief
constituent of sandstone.
Quartzite — A compact
granular rock composed of quartz crystals, usually so firmly cemented as to make
the mass homogenous. The stone is generally quarried in stratified layers, the surfaces
of which are unusually smooth. Its crushing and tensile strengths are extremely
high; the colour range is wide.
Quartzitic sandstone
— A sandstone with a high concentration of quartz grains and siliceous
cement.
Quirt — A groove
separating a bed or other moulding from the adjoining numbers.
Quoins — Stone
at the corner of a wall emphasised by size, projection, and rustication or by a
different finish.
- R -
Range —
A course of any thickness that is continued across the entire face. All range courses
need not be of the same thickness.
Recess — a sinkages
in a wall plane.
Reglet — a narrow,
flat moulding of rectangular profile.
Relief or relieve
— Ornament in relief. The ornament or figure can be slightly, half, or greatly projected.
Relieving arch
— one built over a lintel, flat arch or smaller arch to divert loads, thus relieving
the lower member for excessive loading. Also known as discharging or safety arch.
Return — the right
angle turn of a moulding.
Return head — stone
facing with the finish appearing on both the face and the edge of the same stone,
as on the corner of a building.
Reveal — the depth
of stone between its outer face and a window or door set in an opening.
Ribbon — narrow
bands of rock differing to various degrees in chemical composition and colour from
the main body of the slate or stone; in other words, bands.
Rift — the most
pronounced (see "grain") direction of splitting or cleavage of stone. Rift and grain
may be obscure, as in some granites, but are important in both quarrying and processing.
Rip rap — irregularly
shaped stones used for facing bridge abutments and fills; stones thrown together
without order to form a foundation or sustaining walls.
Rise — the heights
of tones, generally used in reference to veneer stone.
Rock — an integral
part of the earth's crust composed of an aggregate of grains of one or more minerals.
(Stone is the commercial term applied to quarry products.)
Rock (pitch) face
— similar to split face, except that the face of the stone is pitched to a given
line and plane producing a bold appearance rather than the comparatively straight
face obtained in split face.
Rodding — reinforcement
of a structurally unsound marble by cementing reinforcing rods into grooves or channels
cut into the back of slab.
Roman Arch — semi-circular
arch.
Rose window — a
circular tone window fitted with carved tracery.
Rough sawn — a
marble surface finish accomplished by the gangsawing process.
Rubbed finish —
mechanically rubbed for smoother finish.
Rubble — a product
term applied to dimension stone used for building purposes, chiefly walls and foundations,
and consisting of irregularly shaped pieces, partly trimmed or squared, generally
with one split or finished face, and selected and specified with a size range.
Rustication — chamfers
or square singings round the face edges of individual stones to create shadows and
to give an appearance of greater weight to the lower part of the building. When
only the horizontal joints are sunk, the device is known as banded rustication.
- S -
Saddle —
a flat strip of stone projecting above the floor between the jambs of the door;
a threshold.
Sandblasted — a
matte-texture marble surface finish with no gloss, accomplished by exposing the
surface to a steady flow of sand under pressure.
Sand-sewn finish
— the surface left as the stone comes from the gangsaw; moderately smooth, granular
surface varying with the texture and grade of the stone.
Sandstone — a sedimentary
rock consisting usually of quartz, cemented with silica, iron oxide or calcium carbonate,
Sandstone is durable, has a very high crushing and tensile strength and a wide range
of colours and textures. Varieties of sandstone are commonly designated by the kind
and prominence of interstitial and bonding material, as siliceous sandstone (bonding
material primarily silica), calcareous sandstone (calcium carbonate prominent as
bonding material or as accessory grains or both), sandstone (clay minerals prominent
as interstitial or bonding materials, or as thin laminac ferruginous sandstone (iron
oxide or hydroxide minerals (hematite,, limonite, et al) as interstitial or as boding
materials in sufficient amount to impart appreciable colour of stone); brownstone
(ferruginous sandstone of dark brown or reddish brown colour), arkose, arkosic sandstone,
or feldspatic sandstone (a sandstone that contains an abundance of grains of feldspar),
conglomerate a sandstone composed in large part of rounded pebbles, also called
puddingstone).
The term "brownstone"
was applied originally to certain Trassic sandstone of the Connecticut Valley in
Massachusetts (Longmeadow sandstone), Connecticut (Portland sandstone), and to similarly
appearing reddish-brown sandstone quarried in and near Hummelstown, PA. Thus the
term originally had geographic significance, but such geographic limitation is undesirable.
Sawed edge — a
clean-cut edge generally achieved by cutting with a diamond blade, gangsaw or wire
saw.
Sawed face — a
finish obtained from the process used in producing building stone; varies in texture
from smooth to rough and coincident with the type of materials used in sawing; characterised
as diamond sawn, sand sawn, chat sawn and shot sawn.
Scale — thin lamina
or paper-like sheets of rock, often loose and interrupting and otherwise smooth
surface on the stone.
Schist — a loose
term applying to foliated metamorphic (recrystallized) rock characterised by thin
foliae that are composed predominantly of minerals of thin platy or prismatic habits
and whose long dimensions are oriented in approximately parallel positions along
the planes of foliation, because of this foliated structure, schists split readily
along these planes and son possess a pronounced rock cleavage. The more common schists
are composed of the micas and other mica-like minerals (such as chlorite) and generally
contain subordinate quartz and/or feldspar of comparatively fine-grained texture;
all graduations exist between schist and gneiss (coarse foliated feldspathic rocks).
Scoria — irregular
masses of lava resembling clinker of slag; may be cellular (vesticular), dark-coloured
and heavy.
Scotia — a concave
molding.
Sculpture — the
work of a sculptor in three-dimensional form by cutting from a solid block of stone.
Semi-rubbed — a
finish achieved by rubbing (by hand or machine) the rough or high spots off the
surface to be used, leaving a certain amount of the natural surface along with the
smoothed areas.
Serpentine — a
hydrous magnesium silicate of igneous origin, generally a very dark green colour
with markings of white, light green or black. One of the hardest varieties of natural
building stone.
Setting space —
a term used to indicate the distance from the finished face of the marble to the
face of the back-up wall.
Shaped stone —
cut stone which has been carved, ground or otherwise processed.
Shear — a type
of stress; a body is in shear when it is subjected to a pair of equal forces which
are opposite in direction and which act along parallel planes.
Shot-sawn — description
of a finish obtained by used steel shot in the gangsawing process to produce random
markings for a rough surface texture.
Sill — a flat stone
used under windows. Doors, and other masonry openings.
Silstone — a fine-grained
non-carbonate clastic rock composed of at least 67% of detrital grains of quartz
and silicate minerals of silt size. Silstones are rarely marketed as such but commonly
are considered as fine-grained sandstones. This class of sediments is texturally
transitional between sandstones and shales (mudstones). Many bluestones and siliceous
flagstones fall within this category. The term is included in these definitions
chiefly to explain the relationship of some siliceous flagstones to the sandstone
category.
Slab — A lengthwise
cut of a large quarry block of stone produced by sawing or splitting in the first
milling or quarrying operation. A slab has tow parallel surfaces.
Slate- A very fine
grained metamorphic rock derived from sedimentary rock shale. Characterized by an
excellent parallel cleavage entirely independent of original bedding, by which cleavage
the rock may be split easily into relatively thin slabs.
Essential mineral constituents
of slates are usually members of the mica group, commonly sericite, muscovite, and
paragonite; of the clay group, chiefly illite and kaolinite; and of the chlorite
group. Common accessory minerals are iron oxides, calcite, quarts, and feldspar.
Other minerals may be present also as minor accessories. Most slates are derived
from shales. Others are derived from fine-grained igneous rock, chiefly volcanic
tuffs, but these are rare and of little commercial importance.
Slip sill — A stone
sill set between jambs (see lug sill)
Smooth finish — description
of the finish produced by planer machines plus the removal of objectionable tool
marks, also known as "smooth planer finish" and "smooth machine finish". Snapped
edge, quarry cut or broken edge — a natural breaking of a stone either by hand or
machine. The break should be at tight angles to the top and bottom surfaces.
Soapstone — a massive
variety of talc with a soapy or greasy feel used for hearths, washtubs, tables tops,
carved ornaments, chemical laboratory counter, etc., and known for its stain-proof
qualities.
Soffit — the finished,
exposed underside of a lintel, arch or portico.
Sound stone — Stone
which is free of cracks, fissures, or other physical defects.
Spall — a stone
fragment that has split or broken off.
Spalls — sizes
may vary from chip-size to one and two-man stones. Spalls are primarily used for
taking up large voids in rough rubble or mosaic patterns.
Spandrel wall —
that part of a curtain wall above the top of a window in one story and below the
sill of the window in the story above.
Splay — a bevelled
or slanted surface.
Spline — a thin
strip of material, such as wood or metal, inserted into the edges of two stones
pieces or stone tiles to make a butt joint between them.
Split — division
of a rock by cleavage.
Split face stone
— stone on which the face has been broken to an approximate plane.
Splitstone finish
— obtained by sawing to accurate heights then breaking by machine to required bed
widths. (Normal bed widths are 3 ½ inches (90 mm).
Spot or spotting
— an adhesive contact, usually of plaster or Paris, applied between the back of
marble veneer and the face of the back-up wall to plumb or secure standing marble.
Stacked bond —
stone that is cut to one dimension and installed with unbroken vertical and horizontal
joints running the entire length and height of the veneered area.
Start — a small
fissure.
Statue — a sculpture
of a human or animal figure.
Sticking — an expression
used in the marble finishing t5ade to describe the process of cementing together
of broken slabs or pieces of marble.
Stone- sometimes
synonymous with rock, but more properly applied to individual blocks, masses or
fragments taken from their original formation or considered for commercial use.
Stool — a flat
stone, generally polished, used as an interior sill.
Stratification
— a structure produced by deposition if sediments in beds or layers (strata), laminae,
lenses, wedges, and other essentially tabular units.
Strip rubble —
generally speaking, strip rubble comes from a ledge quarry, the beds of the stone,
while uniformly straight, are of the natural cleft as the stone is removed from
the ledge, and then split by machine to approximately 4-inch (100mm) widths.
Strips — long pieces
of stone, usually low height ashlar courses, where length to height ratio is at
maximum for the material used.
Styrolite — a longitudinally
streaked, columnar structure occurring in some marbles and of the same material
as the marble in which it occurs.
Surround — an enframement.
- T -
Tablet —
A small, flat slab or surface of stone, especially one bearing or intended to bear
an inscription, carving or the like.
Template — a pattern
for repetitive marking or fabricating operation.
Terrazzo — a type
of concrete in which chips or pieces of stone, usually marble, are mixed with cement
and are ground to a flat surface, exposing the chips, which take a high polish.
Thin marble — a
fabricated marble unit of w inches (50 mm) or less in thickness.
Tile — a thin modular
stone unit.
Tolerance — dimensional
allowance made for the inability of men and machines to fabricate a product of exact
dimensions.
Throat — the name
sometimes given to the small groove under the windowsill or dripstone intended to
deflect rainwater from the wall face.
Tooled finish —
customarily has four, six, or eight parallel, concave grooves to the inch.
Tracery — ornamentation
of panels, circular windows, window heads, etc.
Translucence —
the light-emitting quality of certain marble varieties containing a crystal structure
capable of transmitting light.
Travertine limestone
— a variety of limestone that has a partly crystalline or microcrystalline texture
and porous or cellular layered structure, the cells being usually concentrated along
certain layers and commonly displaying small stalactitic forms.
Travertine marble
— a variety of limestone regarded as a product of chemical precipitation from hot
springs. Travertine is cellular with the cells usually concentrated in thin layers
that display a stalactitic structure. Some that take a polish are sold as marble
and may be classified as travertine marble under the class of commercial marble.
Tread — a flat
stone used as the top-walking surface on steps.
Trim — stone used
as decorative items only, such as sill, coping, enframements, etc., with the facing
of another material.
Trimmer arch —
a stone arch, usually a low-rise arch, used for supporting a fireplace hearth.
Tuff — cemented
volcanic ash, many varieties included.
- U -
Undercut —
cut so as to present an overhanging part.
- V -
Vein cut —
cutting quarried marble or stone perpendicular to the natural bedding plane.
Veining — coloured
markings in limestone, marble, alabaster, etc.
Veneer — a non-load
bearing facing of stone attached to a backing for the purpose of ornamentation,
protection or insulation. Veneer shall support no vertical load other than its own
weight and possibly the vertical dead load of veneer above.
Veneer stone —
a non-loadbearing facing of stone attached to a backing for the purpose of ornamentation,
protection or insulation. Veneer shall support no vertical load other than its own
weight and possibly the vertical dead load of veneer above.
Venting — a method
used to allow air and moisture to escape to the outside from the wall cavity (see
cavity vent).
Verde antique —
a marble composed chiefly of massive serpentine and capable of being polished. It
is commonly crossed by veinlets of other minerals, chiefly carbonates of calcium
and magnesium.
- W -
Wall plate —
a horizontal member anchored to a masonry wall to which other structural elements
may be attached. Also called "head plate". Usually steel, 3/16-inch (5mm) in diameter
and formed in a "Z" shape or a rectangle.
Wall tie — a bounder
or metal piece which connects wythes of masonry to each other or to other materials.
Wall tie cavity
— a rigid corrosion-resistant metal tie which bonds two wythes of a cavity wall.
It is filling of natural void with colour-blended materials.
Walls — one of
the sides of a room or building connecting floor and ceiling or foundation and roof:
Walls bearing —
a wall supporting a vertical load in addition to its own weight.
- Cavity a wall in which
the inner and outer wythes are separated by an air space but tied together with
metal ties.
- Composite — a wall
in which the facing and backing are of different materials and bonded together with
bond stones to exert a common reaction under load.
- Veneer or face — a
wall in which a thin facing and the backing are of different materials but not so
bonded as to exert a common reaction under load.
- Wind (wined) — a twisting
warp from cutting slabs in the gangsaws.
Warped walls —
generally a condition experienced only in flagging or flagstone materials; very
common with flagstone materials that are taken from the ground and used in their
natural state. To eliminate warping in stones, it would be necessary to further
finish the material by methods such as machining, sand rubbing, honing or polishing.
Wash — a sloped
area or the area water will run over.
Water bar — typically
a strip in a reglet in windowsill and stone below to prevent water passage.
Water table — a
projection of lowest masonry on the outside of the wall slightly above the ground.
Often a damp course is placed at the level of the water table to prevent upward
penetration of ground water.
Waxing — an expression
used in the marble finishing trade to indicate the filling of natural voids with
colour-blended materials.
Wear — the removal
of material or impairment of surface finishing through friction or impact use.
Weathering — natural
alteration by either chemical or mechanical processes due to the action of constituents
of the atmosphere, surface waters, soil and other ground waters, or to temperature
changes; the inclined top surface of a stone such as a coping, cornice, or windowsill.
Wedging — splitting
of stone by driving wedges into planes of weakness.
Wire saw — method
of cutting stone by passing a twisted, multi-strand wire over the stone and immersing
the wire in a slurry of abrasive material.
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