South West, Cornwall, Devon, Mendips, Dorset, Bristol, Forest of Dean, Somerset Cornwall and Devon South West Stone Quarries; Building Stone Quarries in the West of England

South West Stone Quarries; Building Stone Quarries in the West of England

South West Stone Quarries; Building Stone Quarries in the West of England
SKU SKU15592
Weight 0.74 kg
 
£18.00
Quantity

Description

Peter Stanier, SB, 216 pp, 241 illustrations, full colour

Publishers description
The South West of England has provided quality building stone for many of Britain's finest buildings over many centuries, and continues to do so. Locally the stone contributes to the distinctive character of many of the region’s prettiest villages.

Where is the stone found and how is it quarried? Famous names are here, such as Bath, Delabole, Ham Hill, Portland or Purbeck, and top quality stone, obtained in large blocks for building, monuments or engineering work, is quarried as ‘dimension stone’ or ‘freestone’; sandstones, limestones, granite and slate. This traditional industry has seen dramatic changes in methods of extraction, processing, transport and uses over the past 120 years. We follow in the footsteps of the Victorian geologist George Harris, visiting the same quarries he saw and described (with diversions on the way) in Cornwall, Dorset, Somerset, Wiltshire and the Forest of Dean, comparing how they work today in a highly mechanised world.

Whether looking at vernacular architecture or the capital's grandest buildings, these stone quarries, large and small, make a major contribution to the character of the landscape and environment around us.

Peter Stanier is the author of Quarries of England & Wales and South West Granite, amongst many others