A rock in a hard place : European use of dolerite in Tasmania

Q3 Multidisciplinary
Evr Ratcliff
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Despite being more prevalent in Tasmania than elsewhere, dolerite found relatively limited use by early European settlers. Dolerite was used in foundations, basements and retaining walls, but was difficult to shape and at least in the first half of the colonial century, highly unfashionable both in colour and texture, although acceptable for industrial buildings and rural outbuildings. Later in the nineteenth century, quarried stones of uniform colour were used to build some notable churches as well as basements for buildings of other materials. There was a progression during the three decades before the First World War from use of stones of varied size to a preference for stones of regular appearance; after which dolerite was largely replaced by concrete. For much of the twentieth century, dolerite was chiefly crushed for road metal, concrete aggregate or railway ballast, with occasional use in formal building. Towards the end of that period, it returned to building in decorative features, and to engineering practice as filling for gabions and in massive assemblies of boulders. This overview traces the use of dolerite in Tasmania from early colonial times to present-day practices in fashionable architecture and as a structural building material.
坚硬地方的岩石:欧洲人在塔斯马尼亚使用的白云石
尽管白云石在塔斯马尼亚比在其他地方更为普遍,但早期欧洲定居者对白云石的使用相对有限。Dolerite被用于地基、地下室和挡土墙,但很难塑造,至少在殖民世纪的前半期,在颜色和质地上都非常不时尚,尽管工业建筑和农村附属建筑可以接受。19世纪后期,采石的颜色统一,被用来建造一些著名的教堂,以及其他材料建筑的地下室。在第一次世界大战前的三十年里,从使用大小不一的石头到偏爱外观整齐的石头有了一个进展;此后,玄武岩大部分被混凝土所取代。在20世纪的大部分时间里,白云石主要被粉碎为道路金属、混凝土骨料或铁路压载物,偶尔用于正式建筑。在这一时期结束时,它又回到了建筑的装饰特征,并在工程实践中作为格宾笼的填料和大量的巨石组合。这篇综述追溯了塔斯马尼亚州从早期殖民时期到现在在时尚建筑和结构建筑材料中的使用。
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来源期刊
Papers and Proceedings - Royal Society of Tasmania
Papers and Proceedings - Royal Society of Tasmania Multidisciplinary-Multidisciplinary
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
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