<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2><SPAN name="II" id="II"></SPAN>II</h2>
<h3>DOWN IN THE QUARRIES</h3>
<p>When walking in the country one day I came to a
beautiful pond by the side of the road. The water
was almost as clear as air, and as I looked down into
it, I could see that the bottom was made of granite.
The farther shores were cliffs of clean granite thirty
or forty feet high and coming down to the water's
edge. The marks of tools could be seen on them,
showing where blocks of stone had evidently been
split off. I picked up a piece of the rock and examined
it closely. It proved to be made up of three
kinds of material. First, there were tiny sparkling
bits of mica. In some places there are mica mines
yielding big sheets of this curious mineral which
is used in the doors of stoves and the little windows
of automobile curtains. With the point of a knife
the bits in my piece of granite could be split into
tiny sheets as thin as paper. The second material
was quartz. This was grayish-white and looked
somewhat like glass. The third material was feldspar.
This, too, was whitish, but one or two sides
of each bit were flat, as if they had not been broken,
but split. This is the most common kind of granite.
There are many varieties. Some of them are almost
white, some dark gray, others pale pink, and yet
others deep red. It is found in more than half the
States of the Union.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>This quarry had been given up and allowed to fill
with water; but it was a granite country, and farther
down the road there was another, where scores of
men were hard at work. This second quarry was
part-way up a hill; or rather, it was a hill of granite
which men were digging out and carrying away.
When they began to open the quarry, much of the
rock was covered with dirt and loose stones, and
even the granite that showed aboveground was worn
and broken and stained. This is called "trap rock."
The easiest way to get rid of it is to blast with dynamite
and then carry away the dirt and fragments.
Next comes the getting out of great masses of rock
to use, some of them perhaps long enough to make
the pillars of a large building.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="figcenter" style="width: 369px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/image019.jpg" width-obs="369" height-obs="580" alt="OPENING A GRANITE QUARRY" title="OPENING A GRANITE QUARRY" />
<span class="caption">OPENING A GRANITE QUARRY<br/><br/>
<i><small>Courtesy Jones Brothers Company.</small></i><br/><br/>
The first thing to do is to strip off the soil from the stone. Then,
as the blocks are cut out, the big derrick lifts and loads them on
waiting cars.</span></p>
<p>Now, granite is a hard stone, but there is no
special difficulty in cutting it if you know how. In
the old days, when people wished to split a big
boulder, they sometimes built a fire beside it, and
when it was well heated, they dropped a heavy iron
ball upon it. King's Chapel in Boston was built
of stone broken in this way. To break from a cliff,
however, a block of granite big enough to make a
long pillar is a different matter, and this is what the
men were doing. First of all, the foreman had examined
the quarry till he had found a stratum of the
right thickness. He had marked where the ends
were to come, and the men had drilled holes down
to the bottom of the stratum. Then he had drawn
a line at the back along where he wished the split to
be, and the men had drilled on this line also a row<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</SPAN></span>
of holes. Next came the blasting. If one very heavy
charge had been exploded, it would probably have
shattered the whole mass, or at any rate have injured
it badly. Instead of this, they put into each
hole a light charge of coarse powder and covered it
with sand. These were all fired at the same instant,
and thus the great block was loosened from the wall.
Sometimes there seems to be no sign of strata, and
then a line of horizontal holes must be drilled where
the bottom of the block is to be. After this comes
what is called the "plug-and-feather" process. Into
each hole are placed two pieces of iron, shaped like
a pencil split down the middle. These are the
"feathers." The "plug" is a small steel wedge that
is put between the iron pieces. Then two men with
hammers go down the line and strike each wedge
almost as gently as if it was a nut whose kernel they
were afraid of crushing. They go down the line
again, striking as softly as before. Then, if you look
closely, you can see a tiny crack between the holes.
There is more hammering, the crack stretches farther,
a few of the wedges are driven deeper and the
others drop out. The block splits off. A mighty
chain is then wound about it, the steam derrick lifts
it, lays it gently upon a car, and it is carried to the
shed to be cut into shape, smoothed, and perhaps
polished.</p>
<p>In almost every kind of work new methods are
invented after a while. In quarrying, however, the
same old methods are in use. The only difference is
that, instead of the work being done by muscle, it is<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</SPAN></span>
done by compressed air or steam or electricity. Compressed
air or steam works the drill and the sledgehammer.
The drill is held by an arm, but the arm is
a long steel rod which is only guided by the workman.
Not the horse-sweep of old times, but the
steam derrick and the electric hoist lift the heavy
blocks from the quarry. Polishing used to be a very
slow, expensive operation, because it was all done
by the strength of some one's right arm, but now,
although it takes as much work as ever, this work is
done by machinery. To "point" a piece of stone,
or give it a somewhat smooth surface, is done now
with tools worked by compressed air. After this,
the stone is rubbed—by machinery, of course—with
water and emery, then by wet felt covered with
pumice or polishing putty. A few years ago two
young Vermonters invented a machine that would
saw granite. This saw has no teeth, but only blades
of iron. Between these blades and the piece of granite,
however, shot of chilled steel are poured; and
they do the real cutting.</p>
<p>Granite has long been used in building wherever
a strong, solid material was needed; but until the
sand blast was tried, people thought it impossible
to do fine work in this stone. There was a firm in
Vermont, however, who believed in the sand blast.
They had a contract with the Government to furnish
several thousand headstones for national cemeteries.
Cutting the names would be slow and costly;
so they made letters and figures of iron, stuck them
to the stones, and turned on the blast. If a sand<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</SPAN></span>
blast is only fast enough, it will cut stone harder
than itself. The blast was turned upon a stone for
five minutes. Then the iron letters were removed.
There stood in raised letters the name, company,
regiment, and rank of the soldier, while a quarter of
an inch of the rest of the stone, which the iron letters
had not protected, had been cut away. By means of
the sand blast it has become possible to do beautiful
carving even in material as hard as granite.</p>
<p>Granite looks so solid that people used to think it
was fireproof; but it is really poor material in a great
fire. Most substances expand when they are heated;
but the three substances of which granite is made do
not expand alike, and so they tend to break apart
and the granite crumbles.</p>
<p>A marble quarry is even more interesting than a
granite quarry. If you stand on a hill in a part of
the country where marble is worked, you will see
white ledges cropping out here and there. The little
villages are white because many of the houses are
built of marble. Then, too, there are great marble
quarries flashing in the sunshine. Sometimes a
marble quarry is chiefly on the surface. Sometimes
the marble stretches into the earth, and the cutting
follows it until a great cavern is made, perhaps two
or three hundred feet deep. A roof is often built to
keep out the rain and snow. It keeps out the light,
too, and on rainy days the roof, together with the
smoke and steam of the engines, makes the bottom
of the quarry a gloomy place. Everywhere there are
slender ladders with men running up and down<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</SPAN></span>
them. There are shouts of the men, clanking of
chains, and puffing of locomotives.</p>
<p>Marble is cut out in somewhat the same way as
granite, but a valuable machine called a "channeler"
is much used. This machine runs back and
forth, cutting a channel two inches wide along the
ends and back and sometimes the bottom of the
block to be taken out.</p>
<p>Marble is so much softer than granite that it is
far more easy to work. Cutting it is a simple matter.
The saw, which is a smooth flat blade of iron, swings
back and forth, while between it and the marble
sand and water are fed. It does not exactly <i>cut</i>, but
rubs, its way through. The round holes in the tops
of washstands are cut by saws like this, only bent
in the form of a cylinder and turned round and
round, going in a little deeper at each revolution.
A queer sort of saw is coming into use. It is a cord
made of three steel wires twisted loosely together.
This cord is stretched tightly over pulleys and
moves very rapidly. Every little ridge of the cord
strikes the stone and cuts a little of it away.</p>
<p>There are varieties of marble without end. The
purest and daintiest is the white of which statues
are carved; but there are black, red, yellow, gray,
blue, green, pink, and orange in all shades. Many
are beautifully marked. The inner walls of buildings
are sometimes covered with thin slabs of marble.
These are often carefully split, and the two pieces
put up side by side, so that the pattern on one is
reversed on the other. Certain kinds of marble contain<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</SPAN></span>
fossils or remains of coral and other animals
that lived hundreds of thousands of years ago. In
some marbles there are so many that the stone seems
to be almost made of them. When a slab is cut and
polished, the fossils are of course cut into; but even
then we can sometimes see their shape. One of the
most common is the crinoid. This was really an
animal, but it looked somewhat like a closed pond
lily with a long stem, and people used to call it the
stone lily. This stem is made up of little flat rings
looking like bits of a pipestem. The stems are often
broken up and these bits are scattered through the
marble. The animals whose shells help to make
marble lived in the ocean, and when they died sank
to the bottom. Many of the shells were broken by
the beating of the waves, but both broken shells and
whole ones became united and hardened into limestone,
one kind of which we call marble. Common
chalk is another kind. Blackboard crayons are made
of this: so are whitewash and whiting for cleaning
silver and making putty.</p>
<p>Another stone that builders would be sorry to do
without is slate. This, too, was formed at the bottom
of the sea. Rivers brought down fine particles
of clay, which settled, were covered by other matter,
and finally became stone. It was formed in layers,
of course, but, queerly enough, it splits at right
angles to its bottom line. Just why it does this is
not quite certain, but the action is thought to be
due to heat and long, slow pressure, which will do
wonderful things, as in the case of coal. This splitting<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</SPAN></span>
is a great convenience for the people who want
to use it for roofing and for blackboards. Blocks of
slate are loosened by blasting, and are taken to the
splitting-shed.</p>
<p>Splitting slate needs care, and a man who is not
careful should never try to work in a slate quarry.
The splitting begins by one man's dividing the
block into pieces about two inches thick and somewhat
larger than the slates are to be when finished.
The way he does this is to cut a little notch in one
end of the block with his "sculpin chisel" and make
a groove from this across the block. He must then
set his chisel into the groove, strike it with a mallet,
and split the slate to the bottom. This sounds easy,
but it needs skill. Slate has sometimes its own notions
of behavior, and it does not always care to
split in a straight line exactly perpendicular to the
bottom of the stratum. The man keeps it wet so
that he can see the crack more plainly, and if that
crack turns back a little to the right, he must turn
it to the left by striking the sculpin toward the left,
or perhaps by striking a rather heavy blow on the
left of the stone itself. Now the chief splitter takes
it, and with a broad thin chisel he splits it into plates
becoming thinner at each split. The second assistant
trims these into the proper shape and size with
either a heavy knife or a machine. Slate can be
sawed and planed; but whatever is done to it should
be done when it first comes from the quarry, for
then it is not so likely to break. It would be very
much cheaper if so much was not broken and wasted<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</SPAN></span>
at the quarries and in the splitting. It is said that
in Wales sometimes one hundred tons of stone are
broken up to get between three and four tons of
good slate. Within the last few years the quarrymen
have been using channeling machines and getting
out the slate in great masses instead of small blocks.
This is not so wasteful by any means; but even now
there is room for new and helpful inventions.</p>
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