Results 1 to 10 of 22

Thread: stone ID

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    Senior Member northpaw's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Athens, GA
    Posts
    691
    Thanked: 192

    Default

    It's a big chunk of rock. With the right (diamond?) saw, one could probably get 4 or 5 hones out of it.

    I really wanted to flatten one of its large faces, but after an hour or so with little progress, I settled for a smaller side that was almost perfectly flat to begin with. This lapped side is roughly 13cm x 6cm (5"x2.5")

    Sure wish I could get the big face lapped. It ain't happening with sandpaper, though.

  2. #2
    Senior Member Kingfish's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    South Florida
    Posts
    1,057
    Thanked: 255

    Default

    Adam,
    Do you mean the side we are looking at came that way? It allready looks like it was cut intentionally and partially lapped.
    Mike

  3. #3
    Senior Member northpaw's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Athens, GA
    Posts
    691
    Thanked: 192

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Kingfish View Post
    Adam,
    Do you mean the side we are looking at came that way? It allready looks like it was cut intentionally and partially lapped.
    Mike
    This side I ended up using was very flat, but no, I don't think it had been cut before I found it and lapped it. It only looks that way now after several hours on about 3 meters of (now ruined) 80 grit sandpaper strip .

  4. #4
    A_S
    A_S is offline
    Only the paranoid survive A_S's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Oxfordshire, UK
    Posts
    349
    Thanked: 232

    Default

    There was a razor hone of considerable repute that was found in the Arbuckle Mountains that was composed of indurated sandstone. The stone was indurated to a depth of 125 ft, but it was the stone on the surface that was the most prized, as weathering had erased the grain of the stone rendering it completely smooth. When you mentioned the lack of grain in your stone, this was the first thing that came to mind. Also, the porousity that you mention is typical of sandstones as well.
    Alternatively, based soley on the colouring, it may be a modification of chloritic slate, various hones of this nature can be found all over the world.

    Kindest regards,
    Alex

  5. The Following User Says Thank You to A_S For This Useful Post:

    northpaw (12-13-2009)

  6. #5
    Senior Member Kingfish's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    South Florida
    Posts
    1,057
    Thanked: 255

    Default

    Adam,
    If one of the "Rock Jocks" is going to help with an ID, it might be helpful to take a couple of close ups where the specimen naturally broke. The cleavage or lack there of means lots to the Geologically inclined.
    Working with nature in the raw makes you think back to a time when our ancestors where rubbing a piece of bronze or iron on such a specimen. Maybe it was someone elses finishing stone long ago Adam? Maybe there was a tribal leader named Lynn of "The Clan of The Straight Razor Place" , and warriors would gather round the fire and show off their new stones and what they can do.
    Mike

  7. The Following User Says Thank You to Kingfish For This Useful Post:

    northpaw (12-13-2009)

  8. #6
    Senior Member blabbermouth JimmyHAD's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Posts
    32,564
    Thanked: 11042

    Default

    Great looking rock Adam. At first glance I thought it was one of the J-nats.

    Alex, just curious, I googled indurated to find that it meant hardened. What might have indurated the sandstone to the depth of 125 feet ? The first thing that comes to my mind is glaciers shifting and work hardening the rock. Anything to that ? Is the cause known ?
    Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.

  9. The Following User Says Thank You to JimmyHAD For This Useful Post:

    northpaw (12-13-2009)

  10. #7
    A_S
    A_S is offline
    Only the paranoid survive A_S's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Oxfordshire, UK
    Posts
    349
    Thanked: 232

    Default

    The main cause for induration is compression in one form of another, glacial movement, contact with harder strata or simply because lower strata have more weight on them than the upper layers. Heat can also turn certain rocks into whetstones or hones. Weathering too, can play a part in this process, but in many cases weathering will destroy stone rather than hardening it, like the novacuite of Carp River.

    There are examples of hones produced by the various methods of compression to be found in the literature. Slate from Hestercombe in England and Novaculite from Bald's Head, Maine are hardened by contact with Syenitic Dykes and Quartz dykes respectively. At Hestercombe, the induration turns the ordinary slate into honestones, but at Bald's Head, it is the material farthest away from the dykes which is most desirable, as the novaculite in contact with the quartz has too splintery a fracture to be of much use.

    In Wales, there are many areas where the slate has been metamorphosed into honestones due to contact with greenstone. The greenstone initially compresses, and ultimately intrudes into, the slate forming a spotted rock known as Snakestone. This is very common in Caernarvonshire and several localities were exploited as a source of honestones.

    Examples of hones that are produced by virtue of being found at an increased depth include Hindostan stones, where the lower layers are preferred due to being harder and less friable; and also hones that were found at a very great depth when digging a well in Hampstead, England.

    Baked shales and baked mudstones producing hones are found in Ayr, the TOS, and at Enterkine Quarry in Tarbolton, respectively. There is also a baked and compressed shale that was used for whetstones in Teesdale, England.

    Another factor that can cause hardening and metamorphosis of other rocks into hones is the presence of iron ore. There were certain grades of Hindostan that contained considerable quantities of iron and these were preferred because they were less friable than the regular sandstone used to make the Hindostan whetstones. There is another honestone from Indiana, known as the Fera Hone-stone, that was very highly regarded. This was a clay-slate that contained iron. Unfortunately, this type of hone was only produced commercially by one quarry, and therefore supply was very limited.

    Also, many different types of hones were processed after extraction by either boiling in oil or baking at very high temperatures. Examples of the former include: Turkey Hones, Chapel Hill Novaculite from North Carolina and the Devil's Punch Bowl Whetstone from the Mangerton Mountains in Ireland. Stones that were baked to improve their performance include the Norway Ragstones, the Kentucky Caron Hone and a hone from Virginia about which I have been unable to find out anything more.

    Incidentally, the sandstone from the Arbuckle Mountains, was so hard that it causes saprks to fly when struck with steel.

    Hope this is of at least some help or interest to you.

    Kindest regards,
    Alex
    Last edited by A_S; 12-13-2009 at 07:57 PM. Reason: Typo

  11. The Following 7 Users Say Thank You to A_S For This Useful Post:

    0livia (12-13-2009), Bart (12-18-2009), JimmyHAD (12-13-2009), livingontheedge (12-15-2009), Mijbil (04-26-2010), naifu (08-27-2010), northpaw (12-13-2009)

  12. #8
    Chat room is open Piet's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Location
    Rotterdam
    Posts
    937
    Thanked: 229

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by northpaw View Post
    This side I ended up using was very flat, but no, I don't think it had been cut before I found it and lapped it. It only looks that way now after several hours on about 3 meters of (now ruined) 80 grit sandpaper strip .
    80 grit sandpaper doesn't work that well for lapping, I know because I wasted a lot of hours trying to lap a swaty with it. A coarse DMT or even a cheap diamant stone will work much better. Wet 120 waterproof sandpaper will also work better.

  13. The Following User Says Thank You to Piet For This Useful Post:

    northpaw (12-13-2009)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •