Glossary

A

Abate

In stone carving, to cut away material, leaving parts in relief.

 

Abrasive Finish

A non-reflective surface finish. An abrasive finish may be defined by the grit size of the abrasive.

 

Abrasive Hardness (Ha)

A measure of the wearing performance of any material for floors, stair treads, and other areas subjected to abrasion by foot traffic. Refer to ASTM C241 and C1353.

 

Abrasion Resistance

This refers to the ability of a material like tile to resist wear. The tile industry has developed the Visible Abrasion Classification system which is referred to as abrasion resistance or PEI Rating to help customers understand how the tile will wear to foot traffic. This scale goes from 0-5 with PEI Rating 0 referring to Only Wall tiles and PEI Rating 5 referring to tiles that can be used in heavy foot traffic areas like airports, malls and other public spaces.

 

Absorption

The amount of water absorbed by a stone, expressed as a percentage by weight. Refer to ASTM C97

 

Accelerator

In masonry, any ingredient added to mortar or concrete to speed the curing process.

 

Acid Wash

A treatment applied to the face of a stone to achieve a texture or finish that is distressed. Most acidic chemical treatments are effective only when applied to calcareous stone varieties.

 

Adhered

Used in reference to stone veneer, secured and supported by adhesion of an approved bonding material over an approved backing.

 

Adhesive

A substance used to bond two surfaces

 

Admixture

A material other than water, aggregates, lime or cement, added to concrete or mortar at the time of mixing. Admixtures are typically added to function as water repellents, coloring agents or to adjust the curing rate of the concrete or mortar.

 

Agate

A variegated, translucent, cryptocrystalline variety of quartz showing colored bands or other markings (clouded, mosslike, etc.).

 

Agglomerated Stone

A manmade product composed of crushed stone combined with resin. See also engineered stone and cultured stone.

 

Aggregate

A small mass of rock, having occurred naturally (as in sand or gravel) or by means of manufacture (as in a crushed aggregate product), used either in a loose, noncohesive state, or as an ingredient in mortar or concrete products.

 

Alkaline

Pertains to a highly basic, as opposed to acidic, substance; for example, hydrogen or carbonate of sodium or potassium.

 

Allowable Capacity

The safe load that can be resisted by a stone anchor, determined by dividing the ultimate capacity by the factor of safety.

 

Ambient Temperature

Temperature of the surrounding environment.

 

Anchor

A corrosion resistant metal fastener used for securing dimension stone to a structure or adjacent stone units. Anchor types for stonework include those made of flat stock (straps, dovetails)and round stock (rod cramp, rod anchor, eyebolt and dowel).

 

Anchorage

The means by which slabs are secured to a self supporting structure.

 

ANSI

American National Standards Institute

 

Antique Finish

A finish that replicates rustic or distressed textures. Produced through mechanical or chemical means to simulate the naturally occurring effects of the aging process.

 

Apron

A trim piece under a projecting stone top, stool, etc.

 

Arch

The curved or pointed construction over a doorway or opening. Arch shapes range from flat to semicircular or semielliptical to acutely pointed.

 

Arris

A slight, although measurable, chamfer where two surfaces meet

 

Artificial Stone

A manmade product attempting to replicate the look of natural stone. This term is actually a misnomer, as it includes an obvious contradiction of terms. Stone is naturally occurring earth material. See engineered stone and cultured marble.

 

Ashlar

A stone façade of generally square or rectangular units having sawed or dressed beds. There are three generally recognized distinctions:

  1. random ashlar: ashlar set with stones of varying length and height so that neither vertical nor horizontal joints are continuous.
  2. coursed ashlar: Ashlar set to form continuous horizontal joints.
  3. stacked ashlar: Ashlar set to form continuous vertical joints.

 

ASI (Allied Stone Industries)

The Allied Stone Industries is made up of stone quarriers, fabricators, and the suppliers of natural building materials and related machinery and tools.

 

ASTM International

A consensus standards authoring organization originally founded 1896 as American Society for Testing Materials.

B

Back Anchor

Any of a variety of anchors that extends from the back surface of a stone panel, as opposed to anchors that penetrate the edges of a stone panel.

 

Back Buttering

The process of applying an adhesive coat to the back of tile just before it is set into position.

 

Backer Rod

A flexible and compressible type of closed cell foam polyethylene, butyl rubber, or open-cell or closed-cell polyurethane rounded at surface to contact sealant. The backer rod is positioned within the joint so as to maintain appropriate depth and cross-sectional shape of the bead.

 

Back-parging

The process of slathering the back of an adhered stone unit with an adhesive material to reduce or eliminate voids in adhesive contact. Also use in travertine or with the application of damp proofing. Also referred to as “back-buttering.”

 

Backsplash

A vertical covering of the wall where a countertop surface meets the wall surface, designed to protect the wall from moisture. Backsplashes range from a few inches in height to “full height backsplashes” that extend from the countertop surface to the underside of the upper cabinets.

 

Back-up Structure

A structural support wall erected behind stone or brick facing.

 

Basalt

A dark colored, igneous rock commercially known as granite when fabricated as dimension stone. The fine-grained and extrusive equivalent of gabbro.

 

Base

In masonry, the bottom course of a stone wall, or the vertical first member above grade or a finished floor.

 

Basic

In geology, one of four subdivisions used to classify igneous rocks based on silica content: acidic, intermediate, basic and ultra-basic. Said of igneous rock containing relatively low silica content (approx. 45 to 50%).

 

Battiscopa

Italian for a bullnose trim piece

 

Bearing Check

A slot, generally not continuous, cut into the back or bed of dimension stone to allow entry of a supporting angle or clip.

 

Bed Joint

A horizontal joint between stones, usually filled with mortar or sealant.

 

Bed

  1. The top or bottom of a joint, natural bed; surface of stone parallel to its stratification.
  2. In granites and marbles, a layer or sheet of the rock mass that is frequently horizontal, commonly curved and lenticular, as developed by fractures. Sometimes also applied to the surface of parting between rock sheets.
  3. In stratified rocks, the unit layer formed by sedimentation; of variable thickness, and commonly tilted or distorted by subsequent deformation. It generally develops a rock cleavage, parting, or jointing along the planes of stratification.

 

Bedding Plane

Plane of sedimentary stone in the position of its original formation. This plane may be horizontal, coincident with mountain slopes, or random.

 

Bedrock

General term referring to the rock underlying other unconsolidated material, such as soil.

 

Belt Course

A continuous horizontal course, marking a division in the wall plane.

 

Bench

Steps formed in a quarry by removal of stone. Also, a long seat of cubic stone. 

 

Bevel

A term describing the intersection of two surfaces meeting at an angle other than 90 degrees.

 

Biocuttura Tile

Biocuttura Tiles are first fired after the green tile is dried and then fired again after the glaze is applied. Also call Double Fired.

 

Bisque

When you look at a glazed tile from the side you can see 2 layers. The body of the tile, or thickest layer, is called the bisque. The top layer is called the glaze.

 

Black Granite

Rock species known to petrologists as diabase, diorite, gabbro and other varieties quarried as dimension stone. As dimension blocks or slabs, they are valued specifically for their dark grey to black color when polished. Scientifically, they are far removed in composition from true granites though they may be satisfactorily used for some of the purposes to which commercial granites are adapted. They possess an interlocking crystalline texture, but unlike granites, they contain little or no quartz or alkalic feldspar, and are characterized by an abundance of one or more of the common black rock-forming minerals (chiefly pyroxenes, hornblende, and biotite).

 

Blade Dressing

A maintenance process required periodically to restore optimum performance of diamond abrasive cutting tools. The process consists of cutting or grinding into a softer material which will abrade at the matrix and expose new diamond surfaces. Dressing is frequently done with manufactured dressing sticks, soft brick, and some abrasive sandstones.

 

Bleed

Staining caused by corrosive metals, oil based putties, mastics, caulking, or sealing compounds.

 

Blending

The random positioning of adjacent veneer panels, floor slabs, or tiles, to prevent large regions of uniform color, contrasted by adjacent large regions of dissimilar uniform color.

 

Bluestone

A fine- to medium-grain, quartz based stone of the U.S. Appalachian Plateau. The stone is well known for relatively easy cleavage along generally flat planes, making it a common choice for naturally cleft products such as flagstone. The term “bluestone” may be used in other parts of the world to describe very dissimilar regional products.

 

Bollard

A free standing stone post or guard.

 

Bond

  1. Pattern of joints in successive courses.
  2. To stick or adhere.

 

Book Match Pattern

A vein matching technique where opposite faces of adjacent slabs are exposed, producing a repeating mirror image of the veining trend of the material. Book matched material is most commonly polished to allow the greatest visibility of the veining character of the stone.

 

Border Piece

Any piece of tile used to encompass, highlight or transition from the primary tile

 

Border Stone

Usually a flat stone used as an edging material. A border stone is generally used to retain or define the pattern around the field of paving.

 

Boulder

Naturally rounded rock fragment larger than 256 mm diameter. Used for crude walls and foundation, generally in mortar.

 

Bowing

A warping or curving of a stone unit.

 

Breccia

Rock characterized by course, angular fragments, either the result of crushing and recementing essentially in place, or deposition of angular pieces that become consolidated. Numerous marbles owe Book Match Pattern their distinctive appearance to the brecciation caused by metamorphism. Italian for, “broken stones, rubble.”

 

Brecciated Marble

Any marble composed of angular fragments.

 

Bridge Crane

A hoisting system that consists of a hoist, normally using cables, which moves on a beam or “bridge” spanning an opening between two rails. The hoist moves laterally along the bridge and the bridge moves longitudinally along the rails, allowing the hoist to be over any position within the rectangle contained within the lengths of the two rails.

 

Bridge Polisher

A single spindle polishing machine that travels along a beam, or “bridge”, which travels atop two rails. Also known as a “gantry” polisher.

 

Bridge Saw

A saw that travels along a beam, or “bridge”, which travels atop two rails. These saws are typically powerful and fitted with large diameter blades. A rotating table is positioned below the saw, allowing for skew cuts, and the saw arbor typically rotates, allowing for angled cuts.

 

Broach

  1. To drill or cut out material left between closely spaced drill holes.
  2. A mason’s sharp-pointed chisel for dressing stone.
  3. An inclined piece of masonry filling the triangular space between the base of an octagonal spire and the top of a square tower.
  4. A type of chisel used for working narrow surfaces.

 

Brushed Finish

A subtly textured surface finish achieved by wet brushing a stone with a coarse rotary-type abrasive brush.

 

BSI

(Building Stone Institute) A trade association of quarriers, fabricators, dealers, and others working with natural stone. Founded in 1919, sponsor of the Tucker Architectural Awards.

 

Bugged Finish

A smooth finish produced in limestone by grinding with power sanders.

 

Building Stone

Rock material in its natural state of composition and aggregation as it exists in the quarry and is usable in construction as dimension building stone. Also used interchangeably with the term dimension stone.

 

Bullnose

Convex rounding of a stone edge, such as a stair tread or countertop.

 

Bullnose Tile

A ceramic floor tile trim that has one rounded finished edge on the tile to give a nice finishing touch. Sometimes it is also used as a substitute for cove base.

 

Bush Hammering

A process which produces textured surfaces with small evenly spaced pits produced by hand or pneumatic hammer. The spacing between the pits is often defined as “6-cut,” “4-cut,” etc.

 

Butt Joint

An external corner formed by two stone panels with one finished edge in a lap joint configuration.

 

Buttering

Placing mortar on stone units with a trowel before setting them into position.

 

C

Calcarenite

Limestone composed predominantly of cemented sand-size grains of the mineral calcite (more rarely aragonite), usually as fragments of shells or other skeletal structures. Some calcarenites contain oolites (small, spherical grains of calcium carbonate that resemble fish eggs) and may be termed oolitic limestone. Calcareous sandstones, in which the calcium carbonate is present chiefly as bonding material, are not included in this category.

 

Calcareous

Refers to substances containing or composed of calcium carbonate.

 

Calcite

A common rock forming mineral. The chief constituent of limestone and most marble.

 

Calcite Limestone

Limestone containing not more than five percent of magnesium carbonate.

 

Calcite Marble

A crystalline variety of limestone containing not more than 5% of magnesium carbonate.

 

Calcite Streaks

White or milky streaks occurring in stone. It is a joint plane usually wider than a glass seam which has been recemented by deposition of calcite in the crack. It is structurally sound.

 

Calibration

Within the stone industry, the process in which stone slabs or units are abraded to achieve a more precise thickness tolerance (±1mm) than what would normally be produced by standard sawing techniques. The term is most frequently used in the production of stone tile, which must have limited thickness variation to allow installation using thin set adhesive. The term gauge is essentially synonymous, although is more commonly used to describe less precise techniques.

 

Canopy

A sheltering roof, as over a niche or a doorway.

 

Cantilever

A structural member supported at only one end. The term is loosely used, although not technically correct, to describe an overhang.

 

Cap or Capital

The culminating stone at the top of a column or pilaster, often richly carved.

 

Carbonic Acid

A weak acid with the formula H2CO3. It is also a name sometimes given to solutions of carbon dioxide in water.

 

Carve

To shape a solid material such as stone by precisely cutting it with a tool.

 

Caulk

To seal a joint with an elastomeric, adhesive compound.

 

Cavity Vent

An opening in joints of stone veneer to allow the passage of air and moisture from inside the wall cavity to the exterior. The vents may be weep holes, plastic tubing, or wicks.

 

Cavity Wall

A multi-wythe masonry wall built with a continuous cavity between the outer masonry,

typically brick or stone, and the inner wall, typically concrete block or frame construction. The cavity is vented to reduce the amount of condensate that will collect in the space, and is wept to provide an evacuation path for any moisture that collects within the space.

 

Cement Putty or Butter

See neat cement.

 

Cement Backer Unit (CBU)

Many tile installers have opted for a thin set method, where the tile is adhered onto a backer board that is nailed to a plywood or concrete substrate using a thin layer of mortar. This backer board or cement backer unit provides a supportive and water resistant layer between the porous substrate and the mortar and tile applied on top of it.

 

Ceramic

Ceramic tiles are created from natural products extracted from the earth that are shaped into tiles and then fired in kilns at extremely high temperatures.

 

Chamfer

A flat treatment, produced by either grinding or cutting, to eliminate the sharp edge where two surfaces meet.

 

Chat Sawn Finish

A rough, gang-sawn finish produced by sawing with coarse abrasives.

 

Chert

Hard, dense sedimentary rock composed of interlocking quartz crystals and possibly amorphous silica (opal). Synonymous with “flint”.

 

Chiseled Edge

The rustic, aged appearance produced by mechanically chipping the stone edge.

 

Cladding

Exterior veneer stone covering. Non-load bearing stone veneer used as the facing material in exterior wall construction.

 

Clast

An individual grain or constituent of a sedimentary rock.

 

Cleavage

The ability of a rock mass to break along natural surfaces; a surface of natural parting.

 

Cleavage Plane

Plane or planes along which a stone may likely break or delaminate.

 

Cleft Finish

Rough-surfaced stones such as slates or sandstones that are cleaved or separated along a natural seam are referred to as natural cleft.

 

CNC Machine

A computer numeric controlled, multiaxis, vertical spindle machine designed to use rotating milling and profiling tools to produce shapes, cut outs, holes, finishes, and various other operations in stone that are otherwise accomplished by more labor intensive techniques.

 

Cobblestone

A dimension stone large enough for use in paving. A term commonly used to describe

paving blocks, usually granite, and generally cut or cleft to approximately rectangular prisms.

 

Colonnade

A range of columns supporting an entablature or one side of a roof.

 

Color Body Tile

A color body tile has the same color on the face of the tile as well as the body of the tile. Also referred to as “through body tile.”

 

Color Enhancer/Sealer

A product that is designed to enrich, brighten and enhance the color and/or character of the stone. Stone enhancers are more frequently used on honed or textured surfaces where the stone color and/or character are muted by the finish. Enhancers are also used to match the color of an exposed slab edge to that of a resin treated slab face.

 

Column

A vertical support, usually consisting of a base, shaft, and capital.

 

Compressive Strength (ASTM C170)

A measure of the resistance of the stone to crushing loads, generally tested per ASTM C170.

 

Conglomerate

A coarse-grained sedimentary rock, with clast grains larger than 2 mm.

 

Construction (cold) Joint

The joint between two separate placements of concrete.

 

Contractor, stone

Company or person that erects and installs fabricated dimension stone.

 

Control Joint

A partial depth joint that is either formed or sawed in concrete to control the location and frequency of shrinkage cracking.

 

Conveyor

A general term often used interchangeably with belt conveyor, but applicable to all conveyor types including pans, screws, buckets, pneumatics, radial stackers and others.

 

Coping

A stone used as a cap on freestanding walls.

 

Corbel

A projection or bracket extending from the face of a wall to support an element above it.

 

Core

The cylindrical mass of stone that results from drilling a hole in stone with a hollow core bit, often times is used as a sampling technique in quarries.

 

Core bit

A hollow cylindrical drilling tool that bores a hole by abrading only the perimeter of the core, utilizing less abrasive than a bit that would abrade the entire diameter of the hole.

 

Core sampling

A drilling process by which a section of rock is taken for the purposes of testing and evaluation.

 

Cornerstone

A ceremonial stone at an exterior corner of a building, generally engraved with pertinent information about the building’s construction, including the date. Also used to describe a masonry stone unit erected at an exterior corner from which lines can be strung to control the linear position of subsequent stone units.

 

Corner Bullnose Tile

A ceramic tile trim that has two rounded finished edges on the tile to be used to complete a corner.

 

Cornice

Any projecting ornamental molding that crowns or finishes the top of a building or wall.

 

Course

A horizontal range of stone units the length of a wall.

 

Coursed Veneer

A veneer achieved by using stones of the same or approximately the same height with stones that achieve that height in multiple courses. Some horizontal joints run the entire length of the veneered area. Vertical joints are constantly broken, so that no two joints will be over one another.

 

Cove

This refers to the trim tile with a concave radius. These tiles are used to form a junction between floor and the adjoining wall.

 

Cove Base

A concave stone molding. See base.

 

Cove Molding

A concave molding is typically found at the sloped or arched junction of a wall and ceiling.

 

Crack

A man-made break, split, fracture, separation, cleavage, or elongated narrow opening, visible without magnification to the human eye and extending from the surface into the stone, which must extend through the grain or matrix of the stone.

 

Cramp

A U-shaped metal anchor used to hold two adjacent units of stone together.

 

Cross-bedding

The arrangement of laminations of strata transverse or oblique to the main planes of stratification.

 

Cross-cut

The process of cutting the initial block of stone parallel to the natural bedding plane. The effect is a mottled or cloudlike appearance. Synonymous with fleuri cut, although the term cross cut is most often used when describing travertine materials.

 

Crowfoot

See stylolite.

 

Cubic Stone

Dimension units more than 2 inches thick e.g., cubic limestone, cubic marble.

 

Cultured Marble

An artificial, manmade product somewhat resembling marble.

 

Cup Wheel

Shop tool used to remove large amounts of material from the edge of a stone. These can be used to aid in the creation of edge profiles and larger radii.

 

Curbing

Stone, generally in cubic forms, bordering streets, walks, etc.

 

Cure Time

The time required for a chemical reaction (polymerization or hydration) to be completed in a sealant, concrete, mortar, or other construction element until the finished visual and performance attributes are developed.

 

Curtain Wall

A non-bearing exterior stone cladding supported by an anchoring system. Used to protect a building from the elements.

 

Cushion

A resilient pad placed between adjoining stone units and other materials to absorb or distribute loads.

 

Cut Stone

Currently, stone that has been fabricated to a finished size and configuration and ready to be installed. Historically, the term “cut stone” was used to describe limestone products.

 

Cycle Time

Time for a machine to complete one cycle, i.e., load, haul, dump, return.

 

D

Damp Proofing

One or more coatings of a compound that is impervious to water. Usually applied to the back or face of the stone or the back of the wall at or near grade.

 

Dead Load

Permanent gravity induced loads, such as those developed by the structure, finishes, and permanently affixed elements. See also live load.

 

Decorative Tile

This term refers to any tile with textures, patterns on their surface. They are typically used to add color/ texture in a setting, highlight the primary tile or create feature walls

 

Dentil

Block projections on an entablature.

 

Dentil Course

Mold course immediately below the cornice, comprising of small, uniformly spaced blocks referred to as “dentils.”

 

Derrick

A hoisting device, usually made up of a guyed mast and hinged boom with pulleys and cables.

 

Diamond

A carbon based mineral, usually manmade, used as an abrasive in stone cutting equipment.

 

Diamond Match

A vein matching technique in which contiguous faces of adjacent slabs are “unfolded” about two perpendicular axes, producing a vein pattern which has approximate symmetry about a point.

 

Diamond Wire Saw

A machine using cable of various diameters and lengths, impregnated with diamond dust or more commonly fitted with cylindrical diamond coated segments. Diamond wire saws are used in quarrying, slabbing, and contour sawing operations.

 

Die

A covering layer of interior stone from wainscot to ceiling.

 

Digital Inventory Management

A software and camera system allowing fabricators and distributors to have a photographic inventory of their materials.

 

Digital Layout Application

Software designed to allow CAD drawing files to be used with scaled digital photographs to allow a fabricator to preplan the layout of his slab or tile project prior to cutting.

 

Digital Templating

A process for virtual, digital measurement of site conditions which eliminates the need to make physical templates. Digital templating information can be interfaced with various CAD and CNC systems to allow rapid transfer and utilization of the information.

 

Dimension Stone

A natural stone product that has been cut, machined, and/or finished to specific size or shape.

 

Dolomite

  1. The mineral form of calcium magnesium carbonate. Constituent of some building limestones.
  2. A crystalline variety of limestone containing in excess of 40 percent magnesium carbonate as the dolomite molecule. Also called “dolostone”.

 

Dolomitic Limestone

Limestone that contains more than 10 percent but less than 80 percent of the mineral dolomite.

 

Dolostone

See entry 2 under dolomite.

 

Dovetail Slot

A continuous groove with a trapezoid section resembling a dove’s tail.

 

Dowel

A short piece of cylindrical nonferrous metal used as a stone anchor.

 

Drafted Margin (British)

Tooled border around the face of a stone. Also called “margin draft”.

 

Dressing

The shaping and squaring of natural stone blocks for storage and shipment. Sometimes called “scabbing”.

 

Drill Rigs

Machines used in quarry operations to bore holes in a linear path to facilitate separation of the stone loaf from its insitu position.

 

Drip

A groove or slot cut beneath and slightly behind the forward edge of a projecting stone member, such as a sill, lintel or coping to cause water to drop at that location and prevent water from running down the face of the wall

 

Drip Stone

A projecting molding over the heads of doorways, windows and archways to throw off the rain. Also known as a “hoodmold” and, when rectangular, as a “label”.

 

Dry Seam

A naturally occurring unhealed fracture in stone which may be a plane of weakness.

 

Dry Set Mortar

This term refers to setting materials that are cement based for thin-bed installations.

 

Dry Stack

In rubble masonry construction, a self supporting wall erected without mortar.

 

Dual Finish

Multiple contrasting finishes, such as thermal and polished, on one piece of stone.

 

Durability

The measure of the ability of natural building stone to endure and to maintain its essential and distinctive characteristics of strength, resistance to decay, and appearance, while exposed to the elements encountered in its application environment.

 

Dutchman

  1. A small piece of stone inserted as a patch in a larger piece of dimension stone.
  2. A small piece of stone inserted in an ashlar wall.

 

Dynamic Coefficient of Friction (DCOF)

This term refers to the newer and more accurate method of measuring the slipperiness of a tile when the tile is wet. Under this method, a tile rated greater than 0.42 is safe to be used for interior level spaces. However, tiles with ratings lower than 0.42 are commonly used with supporting accessories.

 

E

Eased Edge

A slightly arrised, chamfered, or radiused edge to eliminate the sharpness of the fabricated stone edge.

 

Eaves

The underside of a sloping roof that overhangs a wall.

 

Edge Chiseling Tool

Tool with carbide jaws used to create a “pitched”, “quarry”, or “chiseled” edge without using a hammer and chisel.

 

Edge Profile

The specific contour to which an exposed edge has been shaped, normally for decorative purposes.

 

Efflorescence

A salt deposit, in the form of a white powder residue that forms on the surface of stone, brick, or mortar. It is caused by alkalis leached from the masonry or soil and carried to the surface by moisture

 

Elevation

A drawing of the vertical faces and elements of a structure, either interior or exterior.

 

Encrinal Marble

Marble deriving decoration from fossils (encrinites) or shells.

 

Engineered Stone

A manmade product composed of a blend of natural minerals (generally quartz) and manmade agents (such as polyester, glass, epoxy, and other such ingredients).

 

Epoxy Adhesive

A bonding material made of epoxy resin and epoxy hardener which is used to bond tile or stone to the backing material.

 

Epoxy Grout

A filler material made of epoxy resin and epoxy hardener which is used to fill the joints between tiles. Epoxy grouts are impervious with stain and chemical resistance.

 

Epoxy Resin

A flexible, usually exothermic curing resin made by the polymerization of an epoxide; used as an adhesive.

 

Erection

The process of setting vertical dimension stone into place.

 

Etched

A decorative surface pattern created by a variety of methods, produced either by chemical or mechanical methods.

 

Exfoliation

Peeling or scaling of stone surfaces caused by chemical or physical weathering.

 

Exposed Face

The visible side of any stone element.

 

Extruded Tiles

Extruded tiles are formed by forcing the clay material through a mold for the desired shape versus pressing the tile

F

Fabricated

Used in reference to dimension stone, it means having undergone cutting, machining, or other processes in order to refine the product for its intended application manufactured and ready for installation.

 

Face

The exposed surface of stone on a structure.

 

Fascia

Any flat horizontal member, generally between moldings, most frequently used when referring to elements of a classical architecture cornice.

 

Feed Rate

The rate of speed with which routing, cutting, or sawing blades and bits travel as they are cutting the material.

 

Feldspar

A group of crystalline minerals, all silicates of aluminum with potassium, sodium, calcium, or barium. An essential constituent of nearly all crystalline rocks.

 

Ferruginous

Said of limestone or sandstone containing a high proportion of iron oxide.

 

Fiberglass Backing

A fine grid mesh reinforcement that is adhered to the back surface of stone slabs which have limited stability. The primary intent of this reinforcement is to reduce safety risks in the handling of fragile slabs.

 

Fieldstone

A naturally occurring, irregularly shaped stone, as found in a field, used for various building applications without further fabrication. Field stone are commonly used in freestanding walls, veneers, walkways, and garden bed linings.

 

Field Tile

When creating a pattern with different ceramic tiles, the more prominent tile that is throughout the largest areas is called the “field tile”.

 

Filler Strip

See backer rod.

 

Filling

A trade expression used to indicate the filling of natural voids in stone units with cements or synthetic resins and similar materials.

 

Fines

The powder, dust, and silt- or sand-sized material resulting from processing, usually crushing, stone.

 

Finish

Process applied to the exposed surfaces of dimension stone during fabrication to achieve the desired aesthetic and/or performance characteristics of the stone. The finish may be applied early or late in the fabrication sequence.

 

Firing

The fifth step in the manufacturing of ceramic tile.

 

Fissure

An industry term describing any naturally occurring separation along crystalline boundaries visible in exposed surface of the stone. Note that the industry use of this term is different than the scientific, geological use of this term.

 

Flagstone

Thin slabs of stone with irregular shapes and split edges used for paving surfaces such as walks, driveways, and patios. The term is used to describe any stone used in this pattern, although is most often used to describe sedimentary stones that have been cleft into their final thickness.

 

Flamed Finish

See Thermal Finish.

 

Fleuri

The mottled random effect obtained when slabs of certain stone varieties are sawn parallel to their natural bedding planes. See also Cross Cut.

 

Fleuri Cut

To cut slabs of quarried stone parallel to the natural bedding plane.

 

Flexural Strength

A bending strength test, normally performed per the ASTM C880 test method, in which a sample of stone of the project thickness is supported by two support rods creating a span of at least 10 times the thickness, and loaded to failure by two rods positioned at quarter points of the span. The results are reported as the stress experienced by the stone sample at the time of specimen failure and expressed as a force per unit area (lbs/in² or pascals). See also modulus of rupture.

 

Flooring

Stone used as an interior pedestrian walking surface.

 

Floor Tile

A ceramic, porcelain or stone tile that has been rated to be used on floors

 

Flute

One of series of shallow, concave, parallel grooves running vertically on the shaft of a column, pilaster, or other surface.

 

Fracture

Any break or separation of fabric within the stone as a result of mechanical stress.

 

Freestone

A stone that may be cut freely in any direction without fracture or splitting. Also called “universal stone.” See isotropic.

 

Frit

Part of the fourth step (glazing) in the manufacturing of ceramic tile. The glaze liquid is prepared from a glass derivative called frit and colored dyes. The glaze is applied by either a high-pressure spray or is poured directly onto the tile.

 

Front-end Loader

A heavy equipment earth moving machine with a hydraulically powered bucket on two booms (or arms) extending in front of the tractor portion of the machine. The bucket may be replaced with other devices to accomplish specific tasks in stone quarrying operations.

 

Frost Proof Tile

Tiles with a water absorption rate greater than 0% and less than 0.5% are said to be Frost Proof. Frost proof tiles are best for outdoor use.

 

Frost Resistance

It is the property of a material (tile or stone) to withstand cyclic freeze/ thaw conditions without being seriously damaged or destroyed. This property is especially important if you are using the tile/ stone in exterior applications and experience extreme weather conditions.

 

Frost Resistant Tile

Tiles with a water absorption rate greater than 0.5% and less than 3.0% are said to be Frost Resistant.

G

Gabbro

A group of dark-colored basic intrusive igneous rocks composed chiefly of labradorite or bytownite and augite. It is the approximate intrusive equivalent of basalt.

 

Gang Saw

A mechanical device employing a series of parallel reciprocating saw blades to cut stone blocks into slabs of predetermined thickness. The most common variety of gang saw used in the stone industry uses a slurry containing steel shot as the abrasive medium; but diamond segments mounted to steel blades are commonly used in gang sawing softer stone such as marble or limestone.

 

Gauge

Any process, although most frequently grinding, done to reduce the effects of the tolerances of stone slab thickness. Gauging may be done to a precise thickness with a specific tolerance, or may simply be done to two or more stones until the thickness of the lot is uniform. See also calibrate.

 

Glass Seam

A trade term in the limestone industry for a former fracture or parting that has been naturally recemented and annealed by deposition of transparent calcite. Similar to calcite streak, but transparent. Compare with dry seam.

 

Glazed Tile

Glazed ceramic tiles are coated with glass-forming minerals and ceramic stains. Typically, they have a matte, semi-gloss or high-gloss finish. They can offer better stain and moisture resistance than unglazed tile. When you look at a glazed tile from the side you can see 2 layers. The top layer is called the glaze. Glazed tiles have a hard non-porous, impermeable surface after firing.

 

Glazing

The fourth step in the manufacturing of ceramic tiles. Glazing liquid is prepared from a glass derivative called frit and colored dyes. The glaze is applied by either a high-pressure spray or is poured directly onto the tile.

 

Gloss Meter

An instrument designed to measure the reflectivity of a surface.

 

Gneiss

Coarse-grained, metamorphic rock with discontinuous foliation caused by planar alignment of plate and lath-shaped minerals. When used for building stone, generally classed as trade granite. Most gneiss is dark and composed mainly of quartz, feldspar, mica and ferromagnesian mineral (iron-magnesium silicates).

 

Grain

  1. A quarry term for a plane of parting in a metamorphic rock, e.g. slate; the direction along which a stone is more easily broken, split, or cut. The main direction of the mineral composition and arrangement in stone.
  2. A very small (less than a few millimeters diameter) particle of rock, such as a sand grain.
  3. A general or descriptive term used to describe the relative size of crystalline rock components, as in “fine-grained” and “course-grained.”

 

Granite (commercial definition)

A term that includes granite (as defined below) plus gneiss, gneissic granite, granite gneiss, and the rock species known to petrologists as syenite, monzonite, and granodiorite, species intermediate between them, the gneissic varieties and gneisses of corresponding mineralogic compositions and the corresponding varieties of porphyritic textures. 

The term commercial granite shall also include other feldspathic crystalline rocks of similar textures, containing minor amounts of accessory minerals, used for special decorative purposes, and known to petrologists as anorthosite and larvikite.

 

Granite (scientific definition)

A visibly granular, crystalline rock of predominantly interlocking texture composed essentially of alkalic feldspars and quartz. Feldspar is generally present in excess of quartz, and accessory minerals (chiefly micas, hornblende, or more rarely pyroxene) are commonly present. 

The alkalic feldspars may be present (1) as individual mineral species, (2) as isomorphous or mechanical intergrowths with each other, or (3) as chemical intergrowths with the lime feldspar molecule, but 80 + 3% of the feldspar must be composed of the potash or soda feldspar molecules.

 

Granite

A very hard, crystalline, igneous rock, gray to pink in color, composed of feldspar, quartz, and lesser amounts of dark ferromagnesium materials. Gneiss and black “granites” are similar to true granites in structure and texture, but are composed of different minerals. Commercial and scientific definitions of the granite group are explained in detail in ASTM C119.

 

Granular

Stones having a texture characterized by particles that are apparent to the unaided eye. For sedimentary rocks, particles less than 4 inches in diameter and approximately equal in size.

 

Greenstone

A metamorphic rock, typically with poorly defined granularity, ranging in color from medium-green or yellowish-green to black. Refer to greenstone group in ASTM C119.

 

Green Tiles

The third step in the manufacturing of ceramic tile. Here, clay is pressed or formed into a tile shape. The pressed tiles are called green tiles at this stage.

 

Grind

To remove portions of stone material by any abrasive method. Grinding may be part of producing a finish, shaping a profile, achieving a specific dimension, creating flatness between adjacently installed pieces, or part of a restorative effort.

 

Grout

  1. A mixture of cementitious material and water, with or without aggregate, proportioned to produce a plastic consistency without segregation of the constituents; also a mixture of other composition but of similar consistency.
  2. To place and tool grout in the joints of stonework.
  3. In quarrying: a term describing the product of the quarry which is unusable for dimension stone, often piled near the extraction site.

 

Guillotine

A device used for cutting stone slabs to sizes by means of wedges driven by hydraulic pressure. The resultant fracture is of low precision, with a ragged, chipped appearance.

H

Halite

Rock salt; the mineral form of sodium chloride (NaCl); a sedimentary rock.

 

Hardness

In stones, hardness most frequently refers to stone’s resistance to abrasion, particularly abrasion due to foot traffic, as tested by either ASTM C241 or C1353. In minerals, hardness generally refers to the mineral’s rank within the Moh’s Scale of Mineral Hardness.

 

Head

The exposed surface of the jointed end of any given piece of stone with a gauged dimension not more than the minimum thickness of the material specified. Also known as “return head.”

 

Hearth

  1. The floor of a fireplace together with an adjacent area of fire-resistant material that extends into the room.
  2. An area permanently floored with fire-resistant material beneath and surrounding a stove.

 

Hearth Stone

Originally the single large stone or stones used for the hearth, now most commonly used to describe the stone in front of the fire chamber and many times extending on either or both sides of the front of the fire chamber.

 

Honed

A satin-smooth surface finish with little or no gloss.

 

Hysteresis, thermal

A residual or permanent volume change in stones after the temperature has been normalized, generally causing the stone panel to bow. Most commonly associated with fine grained true marbles used in thin panel applications.

I

Igneous

Any of the various volcanic rocks, solidified after the molten state, such as granite. Igneous is one of the three main rock classifications. Compare with metamorphic and sedimentary.

 

Impervious Tiles

These tiles have less than 0.5% moisture absorption. These tiles are frost proof and can be used in exterior areas or on building facades.

 

Impregnators

Any applied repellent that penetrates the stone and resides below the plane of the finished surface. Impregnators may be hydrophobic (water-repellent), oliophobic (oil repellent), or both, and are used in some stone varieties to increase stain resistance.

 

Incise

To cut inwardly or engrave, especially in a “V” shaped profile, as in an inscription.

 

Inscription

Lettering cut in stone.

 

Isolation joint

A joint separating a concrete slab from another element, such as a column or wall.

J

Joint

A space between installed stone units or between a dimension stone and the adjoining material.

 

Jointing Scheme

The intentional pattern created by the direction and position of stone joints as determined by the design professional for aesthetic reasons.

K

Kaolinite

A hydrous aluminum silicate mineral.

 

Kerf

  1. A slot, either local or continuous, cut into the edge of a stone with a saw blade for insertion of anchors.
  2. The width of a cut when sawing through stone blocks or jointing slabs.

 

Keystone

The central stone of an arch; sometimes sculpted or otherwise embellished.

L

Lamination

Two or more thicknesses of stone slab adhered together at an exposed edge, usually in decorative work such as countertops, creating an aesthetic effect that suggests that the stone is thicker than it actually is. Laminated edges may be dressed or profiled to a variety of shapes for additional decorative value.

 

Lappato Tile

Tiles with a semi-polish finish on the surface.

 

Laser

An acronym for Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation, which produces an intense narrow beam of coherent, monochromatic light. Lasers are used in the stone industry for a variety of cutting machine alignment aids, layout aids, and leveling instruments.

 

Lathe

Any machine that spins a block or multiple blocks of material about a horizontal axis for the purposes of creating shapes that have symmetry about the axis of rotation, such as columns, balusters, and urns.

 

Lead Buttons

Although not often used in modern masonry construction, these were small shims made of lead or similar malleable metal alloys used in horizontal joints to support the stones until the mortar has set.

Levigato Tile

Tiles with a polish finish on the surface.

 

Lewis

A lifting device consisting of multiple sections of metal forming a tapered shape which is inserted into a dovetail shaped preparation cut into the stone. Although uncommon in current industry use, lewis lifters were frequently used for hoisting quarry blocks or for heavy, cubic sections of finished stone work. Also known as “box lewis.”

 

Lewis Pin

A pin, usually with an eye at the upper end, used in pairs and fitted to holes drilled at opposing angles in cubic stones for hoisting purposes.

 

Limestone

A sedimentary rock composed primarily of calcite or dolomite. The varieties of limestone used as dimension stone are usually well consolidated and exhibit a minimum of graining or bedding direction. See definition of limestone group in ASTM C119.

 

Line (edge) Polisher

A large production machine which utilizes one or more spindles to achieve a finished edge profile on a piece of stone as it is fed through a conveying line.

 

Liners

An additional block or strip of stone adhered and doweled to the back face of a stone panel for the purpose of providing a horizontal surface which can be supported by a shelf angle. The liner material may or may not be of the same stone species as the panel. Also known as “liner block” or “cleat.”

 

Lintel

A horizontal stone spanning over the opening of a door, window, or other opening that acts as a beam to carry the weight of the wall above it.

 

Lippage

The planar offset of the finished surfaces of two adjacent stone units.

 

Listello Tile

A decorative border tile used on walls.

 

Live Load

The portion of a load on a structural member that is variable, such as occupants, furniture, traffic, and wind. See also Dead Load.

 

Load Cell

An electronic device (transducer) that emits an electric signal based on the force applied to the device.

 

Lug Sill

In stone masonry, a sill that projects into the jambs of a window or door opening (compare slip sill).

M

Machine Finish

In limestone, the generally recognized standard machine finish produced by the planers. Also known as “machine smooth” or “planar” finish.

 

Maintenance

Cleaning and/or other remedial activity performed on a scheduled basis: daily, weekly, etc. in order to remove dirt, dust and other contaminants that degrade the stone’s appearance and/or performance.

 

Marble

A metamorphic crystalline rock composed predominantly of crystalline grains of calcite, dolomite, or serpentine, and capable of taking a polish. Commercial and scientific definitions of the marble group are explained in detail in ASTM C119.

 

Marble (commercial definition)

A crystalline rock, capable of taking a polish, and composed of one or more of the minerals calcite, dolomite, and serpentine. Commercial and scientific definitions of the marble group are explained in detail in ASTM C119.

 

Marble Institute of America (MIA)

An international trade association whose membership is composed of producers, fabricators, contractors, exporters, importers, distributors, sales agents, and vendors who provide products and/or services to the dimension stone industry and building owners.

 

Masonry

  1. Built up construction, usually individual units set in mortar.
  2. That branch of construction dealing with plaster, concrete construction, and the laying up of stone, brick, tile and other such units with mortar.

 

Metamorphic Rock

Rock altered in appearance, density, crystalline structure, and in some cases, mineral composition, by high temperature and intense pressure. Includes slate derived from shale, quartz based stone from quartzitic sand, and true marble from limestone.

 

Metamorphism

The change or alteration in a rock caused by exterior agencies, such as deep-seated heat and pressure, or intrusion of rock materials.

 

Microcrystalline

Said of a stone that consists largely or wholly of crystals that are so small as to be recognizable only under magnification.

 

Milling

In the stone industries, comprehensive term for processing quarry blocks through sawing, planning, turning and cutting techniques to finished stone.

 

Miter

Any condition of stone veneer, coping, paving strips, etc, where a corner condition is accomplished by two stones with angular cuts, with the angles of the cuts being equal to the bisection of the total angle. See also quirk miter.

 

Mockup

A sample section of stonework that is installed, often including other related construction components, for the purpose of obtaining designer and owner approval prior to commencement of quarrying, fabricating, or installation of stonework. The mockup may be independent of the project or may be part of the project and remain in place as part of the completed work.

 

Modular

Refers to standard patterns used throughout the stone industry that are usually based on multiples of a given height or size.

 

Modulus of Elasticity

Tested per ASTM C1352, the ratio of stress to corresponding linear strain of a material, expressed as a force per unit area (lbs/in² or pascals), and used as a measure of a material’s stiffness. Also known as “Young’s Modulus.”

 

Modulus of Rupture

A bending strength test, normally performed per the ASTM C99 test method, in which a small sample of stone (8” x 4” x 2¼”) is supported by two support rods, and loaded to failure by a third rod positioned at the center of the span. The results are reported as the stress experienced by the stone sample at the time of specimen failure, and expressed as a force per unit area (lbs/in² or pascals). See also flexural strength.

 

Moh’s Scale

A relative scale of mineral hardness developed by German Mineralogist Friedrich Mohs in 1822 ranking ten common minerals by their scratch resistance.

 

Moldings

Decorative stone deviating from a plane surface by projections, curved profiles, recesses or any combination thereof.

 

Monocuttura Tile

Tiles that are fired once after the glaze is applied are called Monocuttura Tiles or single fired.

 

Monolithic

Shaped from a single block of stone, in contrast to a unit that was created by Miter using multiple units of stone.

 

Mortar

A mixture of cement paste and fine aggregate used in setting stone units or filling joints between stone units. Mortar may contain masonry cement, or may contain hydraulic cement with lime (and possibly other admixtures) to afford greater plasticity and workability than are attainable with standard portland cement mortar.

 

Mosaic

A decorative installation, usually a graphic or artwork display, made up of an assemblage of small units of different colored stones or glass to create the total image or pattern.

 

Mosaic Tile

Tile sizes 2”x2” and smaller are usually referred to as mosaics and are often used with different colors and shapes to create a pattern or decorative inset. Some of these smaller tiles also come in different shapes, such as hexagon and rectangle.

 

Movement Joint

In tile installations, a joint where only the finish material is separated by an elastomeric filler, and the substrate is uninterrupted. Also known as a “generic movement joint.”

 

MSDS

The abbreviation for Material Safety Data Sheet. The information required by OSHA’s Hazard Communication Standard (HCS) to convey hazardous information to downstream customers.

 

Mullion

A structural unit that separates two window units

N

Natural Bed

The horizontal stratification of stone as it was formed in the deposit.

 

Natural Cleft

Stone that is split (cleaved) parallel to its stratification, yielding a surface that is irregular to a degree that corresponds with the flatness of the material’s layering.

 

Natural Stone

A product of nature. A stone such as granite, marble, limestone, slate, travertine, or sandstone that is formed by nature, and is not artificial or manmade.

 

Neat Cement

A fluid mixture of portland cement and water, with or without other ingredients; also the hardened equivalent of such mixture. Commonly used in a thick, creamy consistency to parge the stone surfaces and strengthen the bond between a stone and a setting bed. Also called “cement butter,” “cement paste” and “cement cream.” See also back parging and parge.

 

Niche

A recess in an interior or exterior wall usually for a statue or an urn, often semicircular in design.

 

Nominal Size

Tile is usually referred to by its nominal size, not its actual size.

 

Non Staining Mortar

Mortar composed of materials which individually or collectively do not contain material that will stain the adjacent materials to which it comes in contact.

 

Non-Vitreous Tiles

Tiles that absorb 7% or more moisture are non-vitreous. They are suited for indoor use only.

 

Notch

A V-shaped cut made on the edge or head of a stone.

 

NTCA

(National Tile Contractors Association)

A trade association whose active membership consists of ceramic and stone

tile installation contractors in the United States.

O

Obsidian

A glassy phase of lava.

 

Off Fall

Also “fall off.” See Remnant.

 

Ogee

A stone molding roughly resembling an “S” shape, with a reverse curved edge: concave above, convex below. Ogee

 

Onyx

A frequently translucent and generally layered, cryptocrystalline calcite with colors in pastel shades, particularly off white, yellow, tan, and green. Commercial definitions of onyx are given in ASTM C119 as part of the marble group.

 

Oolitic Limestone

A calcite-cemented calcareous stone formed of shells and shell fragments, practically noncrystalline in character. This limestone is characteristically a freestone, without cleavage planes, possessing a remarkable uniformity of composition, texture, and structure.

 

Open-faced Quarry

A quarry with relatively large lateral expanse when compared to its depth, in contrast to traditional derrick quarries which had relatively short lateral dimensions and great depths.

 

OSHA

The acronym for Occupational Safety and Health Administration.

 

Out-crop

That part of a geologic formation or structure that protrudes above or at ground level.

 

Outriggers

A temporary support extending from machinery, such as cranes, to provide greater stance width and improve stability when handling loads with extended boom lengths.

 

Overburden

Waste stone, earth or other material covering the deposit of stone which must be removed to gain access to the desired stone.

 

Overhang

The portion of a stone that protrudes past the surface on which it is set.

 

Oxalic Acid

A relatively strong acid that is used, typically as an additive to other polishing compounds, in the polishing of many marbles and limestones.

P

Palletize

To stack and secure stone units to a pallet for ease, safety, and efficiency in handling and transport.

 

Panel

A term used to describe either a single unit of fabricated stone veneer, or a preassembled panel including multiple stone units affixed to a structural panel framework.

 

Parapet

A low wall along the edge of a terrace, roof, or balcony, which is usually simply the extension of the exterior wall below it.

 

Parge

To apply a thin coat of mortar, thin-set, neat cement, or other bonding agent to the back of stone units, or to the face of the backup material, normally for the purpose of reducing the voids, increasing bond strength, or waterproofing. See also back parging and neat cement.

 

Patina

The change in color or texture of the surface of natural stone due to age or exposure to various elements

 

Paver

A single unit of fabricated stone for use as an exterior paving material.

 

Paving

Stone used as an exterior wearing surface, as in patios, walkways, driveways, etc.

 

Pedestal

In classical architecture, the support for a column or statue, consisting of a base, dado, and cap.

 

Pediment

The gable end of a roof in classical architecture. Located above a horizontal cornice member, it comprises the raking cornices and the tympanum. It is typically triangular, but can also be curved when applied as a decorative element over windows.

 

PEL

Permissible Exposure Limit: PELs are established and enforced by OSHA to protect workers against the health effects of overexposure to hazardous substances.

 

Percussion Drilling

Any method of drilling that includes a combination of hammering blows along the longitudinal axis of the bit with rotation of the bit. Also called “hammer” drilling.

 

Perforated Wall

One which contains a considerable number of relatively small openings, often called pierced wall or screen wall.

 

Pergola

Garden structure formed by two rows of posts or pillars with joists and open framing above, often covered by climbing plants and shading a walkway.

 

Pillowed

A tile finish that features softly rounded edges, thus giving the tile a pillowed look.

 

Pit Quarry

Below ground-level quarry.

 

Pitch Faced

A rustic finish for veneer stone created with a split or chiseled face, and dressed along the stone’s perimeter to produce convex projection. See also rock faced.

 

Plinth

  1. The base block at the junction of the stone base and trim around a door or other opening.
  2. The bottom stone block of a column or pedestal.

 

Plucked Finish

A stone surface produced by setting a planer blade so deep that it removes stone by spalling rather than by shaving.

 

Plutonic

Applies to igneous rocks formed beneath the surface of the earth, typically with large crystals owing to the slowness of cooling.

 

Pointing

The final filling and finishing of mortar joints that have been raked.

 

Polished Finish

A glossy, highly reflective surface finish that brings out the full color and character of the stone.

 

Polishing

A process utilizing abrasives in combination with specific polishing powders and/ or chemicals to produce a glossy, highly reflective surface finish on the stone.

 

Polishing Compounds

Any of the powders or chemicals used in addition to the abrasive machine heads that are used to achieve a polished finish.

 

Polishing Cream

A polishing compound that is supplied in a cream or paste consistency.

 

Polishing Pads

Small diameter flexible disks with embedded abrasives used with handheld tools or small portable machines for polishing of stone. These pads may be used in combination with compounds, and may be used either wet or dry.

 

Porcelain Tiles

Porcelain tile is made up of 50% feldspar and is fired at a much higher temperature than regular ceramic tile making porcelain tile harder and more. Due to this, porcelain is highly resistant to scratches, chips and stains and is a great choice for  interior and exterior applications as well as heavy-use and commercial areas.

 

Porphyry

An igneous rock characterized by distinct and contrasting sizes of coarse and fine-grained crystals. Used as a decorative building and/or paving stone.

 

Portico

A porch formed by a roof supported with columns, similar to a temple front.

 

Poultice

Any absorbent material (powder, cloth, etc) used in a saturated condition with water or solvent based fluids and applied to a stone surface for the purpose of removing embedded stains.

 

PPE

The abbreviation for Personal Protective Equipment, such as protective clothing, safety toe shoes, helmets, goggles, etc., designed to protect the wearer’s body from injury from exposures in the work environment.

 

Preassembled Units

A composite unit consisting of a structural backing, usually steel or concrete, multiple panels of stone, and necessary anchorage and connection hardware that is built off-site and transported to the construction site for erection.

 

Precast

In stone facades, refers to a bi-material panel consisting of multiple stone face units and a concrete backer panel. The panel is cast off-site, then transported to the construction site for erection.

 

Pressing

The third and most common step in the manufacturing of ceramic tile. The clay is pressed or formed into a tile shape. These pressed tiles are called green tiles at this stage.

 

Pressure Relieving Joint

See expansion joint.

 

Primer

  1. A unit or package of ignition devises used to initiate other explosives or blasting agents in the quarry.
  2. A liquid coat applied to increase bond strength of a joint sealant.

 

Producer

Company or person that quarries and supplies dimension stone to the commercial market.

 

Profile Wheel

Any grinding wheel that has convex or concave shapes and can be adapted to a router, hand held grinder, or CNC machine for the purpose of producing a desired shape to a stone edge.

 

Projections

Any stone that is installed in a position outward of the balance of the wall for aesthetic or water control purposes.

 

Prospecting

The practice of locating mineral deposits of commercial value.

 

Pumice

Exceptionally cellular, glassy lava resembling a solid froth.

Q

Quarried Stone

Stone which has been extracted from the earth by means of man power and machines.

 

Quarrier

Company or person that extracts natural stone from a quarry.

 

Quarry

  1. The physical site, open or underground, where stone is extracted from the earth.
  2. The process of extracting stone from open pit or underground mine.

 

Quarry Block

Generally, a piece of rough stone as it comes from a quarry, generally dressed or wire sawed to the shape of a rectangular prism (having three pairs of roughly parallel faces) for shipment.

 

Quarry Run

A term used by some producers to mean the lot of material has not been culled or otherwise limited for range of color and/ or features, and includes the entire spectrum of material that is yielded by that particular deposit.

 

Quarry Sap

A term used by the limestone industry to describe the natural moisture in freshly quarried stone.

 

Quarry Tile

A term used for impervious unglazed tile.

 

Quartz

A silicon dioxide mineral that occurs in colorless and transparent or colored hexagonal crystals or in crystalline masses. One of the hardest minerals of abundance in stones such as sandstone, granite, and quartzite.

 

Quartz Based Stone

A dimension stone group that includes both sedimentary (as in sandstone) or metamorphic (as in quartzite) stones and are characteristically high in free silica content. Definitions of the classes of stone which form the quartz based stone group are explained in ASTM C119.

 

Quartzite

A dense, hard metamorphic quartz based stone typically formed from sandstone. In some deposits, intrusion of minerals during the formation process creates unusual coloration. See ASTM C119.

 

Quartzitic Sandstone

A variety of sandstone including higher content of free silica and siliceous cements than typical quartz-based sandstones.

 

Quirk Miter

An external corner formed by two stone panels with beveled (usually 45°) edges and blunted, finished noses to reduce the chipping vulnerability of the sharp edges that occur with a common miter.

 

Quoin

One of the decorative dressed stones or bricks used at the corner of a building. Quoins are usually laid so their faces are alternately large and small.

R

Rabbet

A groove cut into the surface along an edge so as to receive another piece.

 

Rain Screen

A curtain wall system in which the outer façade shields, or “screens,” rain from infiltrating the wall cavity, but is not actually sealed. The cavity is pressure equalized with the outside air, avoiding pressure differences that would otherwise draw water into the cavity. Minor amounts of water that penetrate the rain screen are evacuated via weep systems designed into the system.

 

Raked Joint

A mortar joint in which the mortar, while still soft, has been scraped back to a specified dimension with a square-edged tool. It is generally used to accentuate the joint due to the pronounced shadow line produced.

 

Random Slab

A stone slab of length and width that are not prespecified, but rather determined by the size of the block from which it was cut.

 

Rebated Kerf

A kerf that includes a second cut at 90° to the kerf axis which accommodates position of the anchor so that it doesn’t occupy any of the joint region, allowing full movement capability of the joint dimension.

 

Recess

Any feature cut into a stone that is set back or indented from the balance of the stone surface, either to accommodate another element, such as anchorage, or for aesthetic appeal.

 

Recrystallized Limestone

A limestone in which a new pattern of crystallinity has pervasively replaced the crystal orientation in the original clastic particles, fossils, or fossil fragments, and interstitial cement.

 

Rectified Tiles

A rectified tile is defined as a tile that has had all edges mechanically finished to achieve a more precise facial dimension.

 

Refinishing

The process of insitu finishing of existing stonework to return it to its near original appearance.

 

Reglet

A narrow groove cut in stone to receive flashing.

 

Reinforcement

Any element, metal, fiberglass, stone, etc. that is embedded in or applied to the stone panel for the purpose of increasing strength.

 

Relief

Carving or embossing raised above a background plane, as in a bas-relief.

 

Relieving Arch

One built over a lintel, flat arch or smaller arch to divert loads, thus relieving the lower member from excessive loading.

 

Remnant

A leftover portion of a slab that cannot be utilized in the primary project, but is salvaged for possible use in another project.

 

Reprise

The line formed by the intersection of two like profiles upon meeting at an interior corner.

 

Resin

Any of a number of clear or translucent substances, either from plant origin or synthetics, used in producing lacquers, adhesives, plastics, polyesters, epoxies, silicones, etc.

 

Resin Patching Sticks

A stone patching material supplied as a solid substance and installed in a heated condition to facilitate flowing into surface imperfections to be filled.

 

Resin Polishing

A reference to abrasive pads used for hand tool polishing, in which abrasives are embedded in a resin matrix.

 

Resined Slab

Slabs that have been treated with a cosmetic improvement process prior to polishing, in which a resinous adhesive, usually epoxy, is applied to the face of the slab, filling various voids in the stone surface. The resin is cured at elevated temperature, after which it is polished, allowing the resin to remain in the voids. This produces a more cosmetically attractive surface without the interruptions of the natural defects.

 

Restoration

Remedial action taken to return an existing installation of stone to its original or acceptable “near original” condition.

 

Return

The right-angle turn of a stone surface, either a molding or flat, as in a window jamb condition.

 

Return Head

See head.

 

Reveal

The exposed portion of a stone between its outer face and a window or door set into an opening.

 

Ribbon

Narrow bands of rock within the quarry deposit of contrasting color and/or texture due to varying mineralogical composition

 

Rift

Direction in which stone splits most readily. Term is most commonly used for granite or other stone without visible stratification or foliation.

 

Riprap

Large, irregular shaped stones randomly placed on an embankment to prevent or minimize soil erosion

 

Rock Faced

A rustic finish for veneer stone created with a split or chiseled face, and dressed along the stone’s perimeter to produce convex projection. See also pitch faced.

 

Rock

  1. Geologically, any natural mass of earth material that has appreciable extent.
  2. In engineering, solid natural material that requires mechanical or explosive techniques for removal.
  3. In the quarry industries, the term stone is more common and means firm, coherent, relatively hard earth material.

 

Rodding

A reinforcement technique used principally in countertop fabrication wherein metal or fiberglass rods are embedded into shallow kerfs in the underside of the stone slab at narrow regions of the countertop, such as the portion in from of a sink. See reinforcement.

 

Roman Arch

A semicircular arch. If built of stone, all units are wedge shaped.

 

Rough Back

The outermost slab produced when slabs are sawn from a block, having one side sawed and the other rough from the original quarry block face. Also known as “skin.”

 

Rough Sawn

A surface finish resulting from the gang or wire sawing process.

 

Rubbed Finish

A stone finish between smooth machine finish and honed, obtained by mechanical rubbing to a very smooth surface.

 

Rubble

A term applied to dimension stone used chiefly for walls and foundations, consisting of stone units that may be highly irregular or partly trimmed or squared, generally with one or more split faces, and selected and specified with a size range. Rubble stone may be installed randomly or coursed.

 

Rustication

Any embellishment done to the joints in stonework, either chamfers or grooves, for the purpose of visually accentuating the joint by increasing the shadow line.

S

Saddles

See thresholds.

 

Sample

An actual piece of dimension stone in a small size used to demonstrate the general color, markings, and finish of a given variety of stone.

 

Sandblasted

A matte-textured surface finish produced by small particles (“sand”) striking the stone surface at high velocities.

 

Sanded Grout

There are two types of grout commonly used in home installations; Portland cement based, and epoxy based. Both of these grout compounds may have sand added to provide additional strength to the tile joint. Sanded grout is recommended for tile joints 1/8th of an inch and larger.

 

Sandstone

Sandstones are sedimentary rocks usually composed of quartz cemented with silica, iron oxide or calcium carbonate. Sandstones range from very soft and friable to very hard and durable, depending on the depth at which it was buried and the nature of the cement. Generally, the most durable sandstones are cemented with silica. Sandstone has a wide range of colors or textures. See quartz based stone.

 

Sanitary Cove Base

A ceramic floor tile trim that has a rounded finished top like a bullnose to cover up the body of the tile.

 

Semi-Vitreous Tiles

Tiles that absorb from 3% to 7% moisture. They are applicable for indoor use only.

 

Sawed Edge

A clean-cut edge generally achieved by cutting with a diamond blade.

 

Sawed Face

A finish obtained from the process used in the cutting of the blocks, slabs, or other units of building stone without further embellishment. It varies in texture from smooth to rough, and is typically named for the type of material used in sawing, e.g. diamond sawn, sand sawn, chat sawn, and shot sawn.

 

Sawyer

One who operates a saw.

 

Scabbing

See dressing.

 

Schist

A loose term applying to foliated metamorphic (recrystallized) rock characterized by thin foliae that are composed predominately of minerals of thin platy or prismatic habits and whose long dimensions are oriented in approximately parallel positions along the planes of foliation. Because of this foliated structure, schists split readily along these planes and so have a pronounced rock cleavage. The more common schists are composed of mica-like minerals (such as chlorite) and generally contain subordinate quartz and/or feldspar of a comparatively fine grained texture; all gradations exist between schist and gneiss (coarsely foliated feldspathic rocks).

 

Scotia

A deep concave molding

 

Screed

A flat board or other straight piece used to level freshly placed concrete, mortar, or sand by sliding it over prepositioned guides that determine the height of the concrete or mortar.

 

Sculpture

A three-dimensional art form cut or chiseled from a monolithic block of stone.

 

Sealant

An elastic adhesive compound used to seal stone veneer joints while still allowing differential movement between the stone units.

 

Sealer

A protective coating or treatment which prevents or retards foreign liquid or matter from penetrating the stone by closing the pores in the surface.

 

Sealing

The process of applying a sealer.

 

Seam Setter

A tool designed to pull two pieces of stone together and make the surfaces flat with each other. The tools are made with suction cups and attached with a set of steel glides. The tool will allow the installer to apply adhesive, pull the stone together, shim if necessary to make flat, while the tool is holding the pieces together until the adhesive dries.

 

Sedimentary

Rocks formed by deposition of particles, or “sediments” laid down in successive strata and cemented together by another agent. The materials of which they are formed are derived from preexisting rocks or the skeletal remains of sea creatures.

 

Serpentine

A common hydrous magnesium silicate rock-forming mineral; generally dark green in color with markings of white, light green, or black. Rocks composed predominantly of such minerals are correctly called “serpentinites”, and are commercially sold as a marble because they can be polished. The definition of serpentine is given in ASTM C119 under the marble group.

 

Setter

A field mechanic who specializes in the installation of dimension stone.

 

Setting Space

The distance from the finished face of a stone unit to the face of the backup material. (Note: in some regions, the term is used to describe the distance between the back of the stone and the face of the backup material. See also “cavity”)

 

Setting

The installation of dimension stone units.

 

Shade Variation

Shade variation is inherent in all fired ceramic products and certain tiles will show greater variation within their dye lots. Shade variation is usually listed on the back label of each tile box with a low, moderate, high or random rating. 

 

Shale

A fine grained sedimentary stone formed by the compaction of clay, silt, or mud.

 

Shear

A force that causes, or attempts to cause, internal adjacent planes of material to slide along one another.

 

Shim

A piece of plastic or other non-corrosive, non-staining material used to temporarily or permanently adjust the position of a stone unit.

 

Shop Drawing

A detailed fabrication and installation drawing showing layout, joinery, dimensions, materials, finishes, methods of anchorage, and/or any other information pertinent to the fabrication or installation of the stone material.

 

Shop Ticket

A document used by a stone fabricator describing the fabrication details of an individual piece of dimension stone, most commonly employing graphics in addition to text, and possibly including production and/or quality control monitoring. Also referred to as a “cutting” or “cut” ticket.

 

Shot Sawed

Description of a finish resulting from using steel shot abrasive in the gang sawing process without further embellishment. This surface will normally have random linear markings for a rough surface texture.

 

Silica

An oxide of silicon with the chemical formula SiO2, found abundantly in nature as sand quarts, or other rock components, The dry cutting or grinding of silica will produce silica dust, which when airborne in particles of respirable size, are a well-known health hazard to those exposed to it without adequate PPE.

 

Siliceous

A rock bearing abundant silica.

 

Sill

The bottom horizontal part of a window or opening in a structure.

 

Siltstone

A fine-grained, non-carbonate clastic rock composed of detrital grains of quartz and silicate minerals of silt size. Siltstones are rarely marketed as such but commonly are considered as fine-grained quartz-based stones (sandstones). Siltstone is texturally transitional between quartz-based stones and shales (mudstones). Many bluestones and siliceous flagstones fall within this category. The term is included in these definitions chiefly to explain the relationship of some siliceous flagstones to the quartz-based stone category.

 

Simulated Stone

An artificial manmade product that attempts to resemble natural stone.

 

Slab

A flat “sheet-like” section of natural stone sawn to a prescribed thickness, with length and width determined by the size of the quarry block from which it was sawed. Slabs will generally receive a face finish and further fabrication processes to become usable dimension stone products.

 

Slate

A very fine grained metamorphic rock derived from sedimentary shale rock, with excellent parallel cleavage, and entirely independent of original bedding, slate may be split easily into relatively thin slabs. See definition of slate in ASTM C119.

 

Sling

A type of strap, typically in the form of a “loop”, made of high-density cloth and rated for the intended load, which is wrapped around an object that is being lifted.

 

Slip Joint

A connection which permits vertical or horizontal movement of a stone unit relative to the adjacent unit.

 

Slip Resistance

This term refers to the slipperiness of a tile. This is more commonly referred to as the COF (Coefficient of Friction) or DCOF (Dynamic Coefficient of Friction). Refer to DCOF for more details.

 

Slip Sill

A stone sill set between jambs. (compare lug sill).

 

Slurry

A suspension of insoluble particles in a liquid.

 

Smooth Finish

A finish of minimum textural quality, presenting the least interruption of surface. Smooth finish may be applied to any surface, flat or molded. It is produced by a variety of machines.

 

Snapped Edge

See Guillotine.

 

Soapstone

A talc-rich stone with a “soapy” feel, used for hearths, tabletops, chemical-resistant laboratory tops, stove facings, and cladding; known for its heat, chemical, and stain resistant properties.

 

Soffit

The underside of any architectural element, such as an arch, beam, lintel, or balcony.

 

Soundness

A property of stone used to describe relative freedom from cracks, faults, voids, and similar imperfections found in untreated stone. One of the characteristics encountered in fabrication.

 

Spacer

Spacers are plastic pieces used to create and maintain uniform spacing between tile during installation. They are made in various thicknesses.

 

Spall

A chip or splinter separated from the main mass of a stone. Also known as sprawl.

 

Spandrel

  1. The often-decorated triangular area between an arch and a wall, or between two arches.
  2. In modern high-rise construction, the panel area between the head of one window and the sill of the one above it. Can be clad in stone, metal, or glass.

 

Splay

A surface that makes an oblique angle with another surface, such as the non-vertical riser face frequently seen on steps.

 

Split

Division of a rock by cleavage.

 

Split-faced Stone

Stone on which the face has been broken to an approximate plane.

 

Split-stone Finish

In building stone, a rough face formed by splitting slabs in a split-face machine. Generally the slabs are sawed parallel to bedding in stratified stone, so that the split face exposes the bedding in natural orientation or overturned, but some stone is sawed perpendicular to bedding and then split with the bedding vertical, either exposed as a cleft surface or vertical.

 

Spot or Spotting

The mortar applied to the back of dimension stone veneer to bridge the space between a stone panel and the backup wall. Often used to describe the plaster or mortar spot used with wire tie anchorage.

 

Spreader Bar

A beam with two lifting slings or cables, one on each end, intended to spread the lifting points while the bar is hoisted from its center.

 

Stacked Bond

Stone that is cut to one dimension and installed with unbroken vertical and horizontal joints running the entire length and height of the veneered area.

 

Sticking

The butt edge repair of a broken piece of stone, now generally done with dowels, cements, or epoxies. The pieces are “stuck” together; thus “sticking.”

 

Stone

Sometimes synonymous with rock, but more properly applied to individual blocks, masses or fragments taken from their original formation or considered for commercial use. In commercial use, the term stone is more frequently used, while scientifically, geologists and petrographers more frequently use the term rock.

 

Stool

The interior sill of a window.

 

Stratification

The layered structure in sedimentary stone deposits as a result of the deposition of sediments in beds or layers (also “strata” or “lamina”).

 

String Course

A horizontal band of masonry, generally narrower that other courses, extending across the façade of a structure and in some structures encircling such decorative features as pillars or engaged columns. May be flush or projected, and flat surfaced or decorated. Also called belt course or band course.

 

Stripping

To remove coatings that block a stone’s ability to breathe which may cause spalling (when the stones crack, pop, or shale). Some examples of common coatings are topical acrylic sealers, janitorial waxes, and polyurethanes.

 

Stylolite

In limestone and marble, generally a bedding plane, along with differential solution of the material on each side has caused interpenetration of points, cones, or columns, forming a contact surface that is rough when separated. Also known as crowfoot.

 

Substrate

The process for installing a ceramic floor begins with the preparation of the tile foundation, or what’s called the substrate. Common materials used as tile substrates in home installations include concrete, plywood, and drywall.

 

Support

An angle, plate or other stones which carry a gravity load.

T

TCNA (Tile Council of North America)

An organization of manufacturers serving the ceramic tile industry, with overlapping interest in the stone tile industry, particularly in installation.

 

Tensile Strength

This refers to the maximum stress a material can withstand before breaking.

 

Template

A pattern for a repetitive marking or fabricating operation.

 

Terrazzo

A flooring surface of marble or granite chips in a cementitious or resinous matrix, which is ground and finished after setting.

 

Texture

Surface quality of stone independent of color.

 

Textured Finish

Any of the rough surface finishes used in dimension stone, selected for aesthetic reasons or as friction performance for walking surfaces.

 

Thermal Finish

A textured surface treatment applied by brief exposure to intense heat.

 

Thinset

In thinset method, the tile is adhered directly onto a backer board that is nailed to a plywood or concrete substrate using a thin layer of mortar.

 

Thin Stone

Dimension stone units that are 2” (50 mm) or less in thickness.

 

Threshold

A flat or profiled strip of stone projecting above the floor between the jambs of a door, often marks the transition between two different flooring materials. Also known as a “saddle.”

 

Through Body

Unglazed tiles that are a solid color all the way through and do not have a top layer of glaze are often referred to as through-body construction. (See Unglazed.)

 

Tile

A thin modular stone/ ceramic unit, less than ¾” (20 mm) thick and has a glazed or unglazed surface.

 

Tilt Shop Cart

A device used in stone fabrication areas to move slabs and/or cut-to-size pieces within the shop. The cart has a bed that tilts, allowing it be loaded with a slab in a vertical orientation but unload the same slab in a horizontal orientation.

 

Tin Oxide

A powder used in the polishing of granite with a talc-like appearance and applied with a felt pad and slow speed buffer.

 

Tolerance

The permissible limit of variation from the specified dimension.

 

Tooled Finish

A finish that customarily has four, six, or eight parallel, concave grooves to the inch. See also bush hammered.

 

Translucence

A characteristic of light colored onyxes and some light colored marbles allowing light to diffuse as it passes through.

 

Travertine

A variety of limestone formed by chemical precipitate from hot springs. Some varieties of travertine take a polish and are known commercially as marble. ASTM C119 classifies travertine in both the limestone and the marble groupings.

 

Tread

A flat stone used as the top (horizontal) walking surface on steps.

 

Trim

The framing or edging of openings and other features on the interior or exterior of a building, including baseboards, picture rails, cornices, and casings.

 

Tumbled Finish

A weathered, aging finish created when the stone is tumbled with sand, pebbles, or steel bearings.

U

Ultimate Capacity

The load resisted by a stone anchor at failure. This load must be divided by the factor of safety to determine a safe load, or allowable capacity.

 

Undercut

Cut so as to present an overhanging part.

 

Unglazed

Unglazed tiles are a solid color all the way through and do not have a top layer of glaze. This is often referred to as through-body construction. They have no additional surface applications and are typically denser and more durable than glazed tile. Thus, they are more suitable for interior and exterior applications. Unglazed tiles do have good slip resistance, however, please note that they do require sealing to help prevent staining.

 

Unit

A piece of fabricated cubic or thin dimension stone.

 

Unsanded Grout

Unsanded grout is typically used in joints that are smaller than 1/8th of an inch.

V

Vacuum Cups

A device used in the handling of smooth surfaced stone which secures itself to the stone surface using vacuum contained within an enclosed chamber that is sealed against the stone via gasketing.

 

Vacuum Lifter

Any stone handling device using vacuum cups as a means of securing itself to the stone.

 

Vein Cut

A cut in quarried stone that is perpendicular to the natural bedding plane, exposing the veining of the material.

 

Vein

A layer, seam, or narrow irregular body of mineral material contrasting the surrounding material in either color, texture, or both.

 

Veneer

A non-structural facing of stone, interior or exterior, serving as ornamentation and a weather barrier.

 

Venting

See Cavity Vent.

 

Vitreous Tiles

Tiles that absorb less than 3% moisture. They are referred to as frost resistant tiles but cannot be used in exterior areas where freeze- thaw conditions could cause tile cracking.

 

Vug

A pocket-like natural cavity in stone, generally the result of solution or recrystallization. Size not limited, but most are between a small fraction of 1 inch and a few inches in average diameter. May be lined with crystals or botryoidal layers of mineral materials. Most common in dolomite, limestone and marble.

W

Wainscot

An interior veneer of stone covering the lower portion of an interior wall.

 

Wall Tie

In masonry, a type of anchor, generally a metal strip, used to secure facing to backup wall or to connect the wythes of a cavity wall. Ties are mortared into joints during setting, and thus do not require that slots or anchor holes be cut.

 

Wall Tiles

Wall tiles are typically glazed tiles with low resistance to abrasion and tension and cannot be subjected to foot traffic or freeze-thaw conditions.

 

Walls, bearing

A wall supporting a vertical load in addition to its own weight

 

Walls, cavity

A wall in which the inner and outer wythes are separated by an air space but tied together with metal ties.

 

Wash

The slope on the top of a stone unit intended to shed water.

 

Water Jet

A machine which uses extremely high pressure water and an abrasive to cut stone material in complex and exacting shapes from slabs or tile.

 

Water Recycling System

Any system that recovers water used in shop fabrication machinery and restores it to a reusable condition by filtering and/ or chemical neutralization, after which it is returned to service.

 

Water Repellent

Any of several types of liquid-applied formulations used to render masonry walls less absorptive. These treatments are said to maintain a material’s ability to breathe away moisture, as distinct from “sealers” which form impervious, non-breathing coatings.

 

Water Table

A course that projects from the face of a wall, generally near grade and having a beveled top and a drip cut in the projecting underside, to deflect water.

 

Water-jet Finish

A surface treatment performed by using water under extreme high pressure.

 

Waterproofing

See Damp Proofing.

 

Waxing

The practice of filling minor surface imperfections such as voids or sand holes with melted shellac, cabinetmaker’s wax, or certain polyester compounds. In the dimension stone industry, it does not refer to the application of paste wax to make surfaces shinier.

 

Wear

The removal of material or impairment of surface finishing through friction or impact use.

 

Weathering

Natural alteration by either chemical or mechanical processes due to the action of constituents of the atmosphere, soil, surface waters, and other ground waters, or by temperature changes.

 

Wedging

Splitting of stone by driving wedges into planes of weakness or holes in the stone.

 

Weep Holes

Openings for drainage in veneer joints or in the structural components supporting the veneer.

 

Wire Sawing

A method of cutting stone by a wire or cable. Traditionally, the term applied to the use of a twisted wire carrying an abrasive slurry as the cutting agent. Currently, the term is more frequently used to describe the use of a cable that is fitted with diamond abrasive segments at regular intervals, cooled with water.

 

Wythe

The inner or outer part of a cavity wall.

X

Y

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Location

West
South East
South East

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