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  2. Flagstone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flagstone

    Flagstone is a sedimentary rock that is split into layers along bedding planes. Flagstone is usually a form of a sandstone composed of feldspar and quartz and is arenaceous in grain size (0.16 mm – 2 mm in diameter). The material that binds flagstone is usually composed of silica, calcite, or iron oxide. The rock color usually comes from ...

  3. According to Experts, THIS Patio Will Last a Lifetime - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/according-experts-patio...

    Buster agrees that concrete pavers will never last as long as natural flagstone. "For comparison, high-strength concrete is typically rated at 6,000 [pounds per square inch (PSI)]. Our Lyons Red ...

  4. Caithness Flagstone Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caithness_Flagstone_Group

    Caithness. The Caithness Flagstone Group is a Devonian lithostratigraphic group (a sequence of rock strata) in northern Scotland. The name is derived from the traditional county of Caithness where the strata are well exposed, especially in coastal cliffs. [ 1]

  5. Flagstone, Queensland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flagstone,_Queensland

    Flagstone is situated in the Bundjalung traditional Indigenous Australian country. [3] Towards the north of Flagstone is the Yugarabul traditional Indigenous Australian country of the Brisbane and surrounding regions. [4] The suburb is named after Flagstone Creek which flows into the Logan River just south of Chadwick Drive in South Maclean.

  6. Blackhouse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackhouse

    Restored blackhouse in a museum on Trotternish, Skye. The origin of the name blackhouse is of some debate. On the Isle of Lewis, in particular, it seems to have been used to distinguish the older blackhouses from some of the newer white-houses (Irish: teach bán [ˌtʲax ˈbˠaːnˠ], teach geal [ˌtʲax ˈɟalˠ]; Scottish Gaelic: taigh-geal [t̪ʰə ˈkʲal̪ˠ]), with their harled (rendered ...

  7. Yorkstone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yorkstone

    Yorkstone slabs. Newly-laid. Yorkstone or York stone is a variety of sandstone, specifically from quarries in Yorkshire that have been worked since the middle ages. [1] Yorkstone is a tight grained, Carboniferous sedimentary rock. The stone consists of quartz, mica, feldspar, clay and iron oxides. The ratio of quartz to mica varies considerably.

  8. Arizona flagstone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arizona_flagstone

    Arizona flagstone is composed of rounded grains of quartz which are cemented by silica. Other minerals are present, mostly as thin seams of clay, mica, secondary calcite, and gypsum. Arizona flagstone is mainly quarried from the Coconino and Prescott National Forests . Although flagstone and dimension stone are quarried from all over the state ...

  9. Vernacular architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vernacular_architecture

    English vernacular building, 16th-century half-timbering and later buildings, in the village of Lavenham, Suffolk. A pair of single 1920s shotgun houses in the Campground Historic District of Mobile, Alabama. Vernacular architecture (also folk architecture[1]) is building done outside any academic tradition, and without professional guidance.

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