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| Sandstone | Slate | Marble | Limestone | Mosaics | Artifacts | Landscaping Stone | Blocks & Slabs | Building Stone | Applications |
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About StonesDifferent types of stones are
classified according to their mineral content and the process of their
formation. Good stones are characterized by durability and hardness,
strength, amenability to dressing, appearance, weight, fineness of grain
and compactness and porosity and absorption. In order to be suitable as
building stone, a rock should have specific qualities such as capacity
to stand the ravages of time and weather, requisite strength to bear
strain and super-incumbent weight and attractive colour' and general
appearance. Its structure must also be such as to allow quarrying into
good sized blocks or planes. It should possess inherent features such as
joints and (in sedimentary rocks) bedding planes.
India possesses extensive deposits of different kinds of building and monumental stones. It is one of the few major countries known for the production and export of granites and marbles of various colours, besides slate and other building stones. The most important building stones in India are the granites/and allied rocks, the standstones, limestones and marbles, and the laterites. Types of Stones The different types of stone are: Igneous Stone Igneous stones are formed from molten or partly molten material i.e. magma, through solidification of magna. Lava is a form of magma cools and solidifies on the surface of the earth. Liquid magma cools and solidifies underneath the Earth's surface, and then mineral gases and liquids penetrate the stone and create new crystalline formations and various colors. Of all igneous rocks, Granite is the most common choice. It is a coarsely crystalline unstratified igneous rock composed of alkali feldspars, quartz, mica and hornblende. Since granite is highly speckled, it varies greatly in color depending on the range of the minerals present and the location of the quarry. When the mica in granite is white, it is known as muscovite, when it is dark it is biolite. In certain types of granite, hornblende is an important ingredient and it may be even more abundant than the micas. Due to its chemistry, granite is a much harder stone. It doesn't scratch as easily and rarely needs heavy-duty grinding. Sedimentary Stone Sedimentary stones are layered rocks, formed through the accumulation and solidification of sediments, which may originally be made up of minerals, rock debris, or animal or vegetable matter. These stones come from such organic elements as glaciers, rivers, wind, oceans and plants. Tiny sedimentary pieces break off from these elements and accumulate to form rock beds. They are bonded through millions of years of heat and pressure and include limestone, sandstone and travertine. The different types of sedimentary stones are:
Metamorphic stones are formed in some fashion from a pre-existing rock, through heat, pressure, the effect of superheated fluids, or any combination of these forces. The change can be a development of crystalline formation, a texture change or even a color change. Metamorphic is derived from the Greek word "meta" denoting a change and "morph" meaning form or a change in form. This changing of one rock type into another new type takes place by an increase in temperature or pressure or a combination of both. The original minerals of the stone recrystallize, small crystals merge to form larger crystals with no changes in the mineral chemistry, fine-grained calcite in limestone recrystallizes to a coarse-grained calcite crystal structure in marble; or there may by a transformation into a different set of metamorphic minerals. This recrystallization transforms the Shale into a colorful Slate "Siliceous". Limestone becomes a multi colored Marble "Calcareous" and the grainy Sandstone alters into a highly crystallized sparkling Quartzite "Siliceous".
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