Difference between revisions of "Colusa sandstone"
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* External source or communication Comment: Contributed information from Fred Gamble, Sept. 2007 | * External source or communication Comment: Contributed information from Fred Gamble, Sept. 2007 |
Revision as of 13:23, 29 April 2016
Description
A fine, even-grain, blue-gray sandstone quarried in Colusa County, California. Colusa sandstone is a moderately soft graywacke stone with a porous surface that has a tendency to spall with aging. It was used a dimension stone along the California coast and in the Hawaiian islands during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Examples of its use in San Francisco include the Westin St. Francis Hotel, Trinity Episcopal Church, the flatiron Flood Building on Market Street, and the Ferry Building on the Embarcadero with its Beaux Arts façade and 240-foot tower.
Additional Images
- Image3 802965.jpg
Spreckels Temple of Music, Golden Gate Park
- Image3 802963.jpg
Flood Building, San Francisco
Sources Checked for Data in Record
- External source or communication Comment: Contributed information from Fred Gamble, Sept. 2007
- Dictionary of Building Preservation, Ward Bucher, ed., John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York City, 1996
- Frank A. Lent, Trade names and Descriptions of Marbles, Limestones, Sandstones, Granites and Other Building Stones Quarried in the United States Canada and other Countries., Stone Publishing Co, New York, 1925