MARBLE



'Marble' is a metamorphic rock resulting from the metamorphism of limestone, composed mostly of calcite (a crystalline form of calcium carbonate, CaCO3). It is extensively used for sculpture, as a building material, and in many other applications. The word 'marble' is colloquially used to refer to many other stones that are capable of taking a high polish.
Faux marble or faux marbling is a wall painting technique that imitates the color patterns of real marble (not to be confused with paper marbling). Marble dust can be combined with cement or synthetic resins to make ''reconstituted'' or ''cultured marble''.
Places named after the stone include Marble Arch, London; the Sea of Marmara; India's Marble Rocks; and the towns of Marble, Minnesota; Marble, Colorado; and Marble Hill, Manhattan, New York. The Elgin Marbles are marble sculptures from the Parthenon that are on display in the British Museum. They were brought to Britain by the Earl of Elgin.
Marble.


Contents
Origins
Kinds of marble
Construction marble
Industrial use of marble
Production
Etymology
Cultural associations
See also
External links

Origins


Marble is a metamorphic rock resulting from regional or rarely contact metamorphism of sedimentary carbonate rocks, either limestone or dolostone, or metamorphism of older marble. This metamorphic process causes a complete recrystallization of the original rock into an interlocking mosaic of calcite, aragonite and/or dolomite crystals. The temperatures and pressures necessary to form marble usually destroy any fossils and sedimentary textures present in the original rock.
Pure white marble is the result of metamorphism of very pure limestones. The characteristic swirls and veins of many colored marble varieties are usually due to various mineral impurities such as clay, silt, sand, iron oxides, or chert which were originally present as grains or layers in the limestone. Green coloration is often due to serpentine resulting from originally high magnesium limestone or dolostone with silica impurities. These various impurities have been mobilized and recrystallized by the intense pressure and heat of the metamorphism.

Kinds of marble


Natural patterns on the polished surface of "landscape marble" can resemble a city skyline or even trees ().

Blocks of cut marble at the historic mill in Marble, Colorado

Black Dębnik marble portal (17th century) of St. Wojciech's Church in Kraków

Some historically important kinds of marble, named after the locations of their quarries, include:

Beijing White from China

Black Marble from Dębnik, Poland

Black Marble from Kilkenny, Ireland

Boticena and Onyx(Green) from Pakistan

BraÄ from the island of BraÄ, Croatia

Brown marble from Chęciny, Poland

Carrara and Luni from Italy

Connemara from Ireland

Danby from Vermont

Durango Marble from Coyote Quarry, Mexico

Fauske from Norway

Llano Pink from Central Texas

Macael from Spain

Makrana from India

Nabresina, from near Trieste

Paros from Greece

Penteli from Greece

Proconnesus from Turkey

Rouge de Rance from Rance, Belgium

Royal White from China

Thassos from Greece

Vietnam White from Vietnam

Yule from Colorado
White marbles, like Carrara in Italy, Royal White and Bejing White in China, have been prized for sculpture since classical times. This preference has to do with the softness and relative isotropy and homogeneity, and a relative resistance to shattering. Also, the low index of refraction of calcite allows light to penetrate several millimeters into the stone before being scattered out, resulting in the characteristic "waxy" look which gives "life" to marble sculptures of the human body.

Construction marble


In the construction, specifically the dimension stone trade, the term "marble" is used for any massive, crystalline calcitic rock (and some non-calcitic rocks) useful as building stone. For example, "Tennessee marble" is really a massive, highly fossiliferous gray to pink to maroon Ordovician dolostone that geologists call the Holston Formation.

Industrial use of marble


Colorless or light-colored marbles are a very pure source of calcium carbonate, which is used in a wide variety of industries. Finely ground marble or calcium carbonate powder is a component in paper,consumer products such as toothpaste, plastics, and paints. Ground calcium carbonate can be made from limestone, chalk, and marble; about 3/4 of the ground calcium carbonate worldwide is made from marble. Ground calcium carbonate is used as a coating pigment for paper because of its high brightness and as a paper filler because it strengthens the sheet and imparts high brightness. Ground calcium carbonate is used in consumer products such as a food additive, in toothpaste, and as an inert filler in pills. It is used in plastics because it imparts stiffness, impact strength, dimensional stability, and thermal conductivity. It is used in paints because it is a good filler and extender, has high brightness, and is weather resistant. However, the growth in demand for ground calcium carbonate in the last decade has mostly been for a coating pigment in paper.
Calcium carbonate can also be reduced under high heat to calcium oxide (also known as "lime"), which has many applications including being a primary component of most cement.

Production


According to the USGS, U.S. dimension marble production in 2005 was 207,000 tonnes valued at $18.9 million. Crushed marble production (for aggregate and industrial uses) was 7.76 million tonnes valued at $58.7 million, of which 4.8 million tonnes was finely ground calcium carbonate and the rest was construction aggregate. U.S. dimension marble demand is about 1.3 million tonnes. The DSAN World Demand for (finished) Marble Index has shown a growth of 10.5% annually for the 2000-2005 period. The largest dimension marble application is tile. The U.S. makes very little marble tile. Most marble tile is made in mammoth completely automated plants that operate 24 hours per day seven days per week in places such as Italy (for example, in Viareggio) and China.

Etymology


The word "marble" derives from the Greek ''marmaros'', "shining stone" (OED). This stem is also the basis for the English word "marmoreal" meaning "marble-like".

Cultural associations


As the favorite medium for Greek and Roman sculptors and architects (see classical sculpture), marble has become a cultural symbol of tradition and refined taste. Its extremely varied and colorful patterns make it a favorite decorative material, and it is often imitated in background patterns for computer displays, etc.
In folklore, marble is associated with the astrological sign of Gemini. Pure white marble is an emblem of purity. It is also an emblem of immortality, and an insurer of success in education.

See also



list of minerals

building material

calcium carbonate

dimension stone

limestone

travertine

alabaster

granite

sandstone

marble sculpture

Pietre dure — inlaying with marble and other stones.

faux marbling — painting surfaces to look like marble.

scagliola — imitating marble with plasterwork.

cultured marble — marble powder with a binder.

paper marbling

Stones of India Marble

External links



Tips for cleaning marble

Learning to carve by Marc Levoy.

Marmo Quarry in the Massa-Carrara region, Italy

USGS Minerals Yearbook: Stone, Dimension

USGS Minerals Yearbook: Stone, Crushed

Dimension Stone Advocate News (DSAN)

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