- Holston Formation
The Holston Formation, alternately known as the Holston Limestone, is a
stratigraphic unit ofOrdovician age within theChickamauga Group in the Ridge-and-Valley physiographic province of the southeasternUnited States . A convert|120|mi|km|adj=on longoutcrop belt of the Holston inEast Tennessee is the source of the decorative building stone known asTennessee marble .Near Knoxville the Holston Formation is about convert|400|ft|m thick but it thins toward the southwest; near
Cleveland, Tennessee it is only 200 feet thick. The rock that is quarried for marble is a highly pure (97% CaCO3)crystalline limestone , pink to cedar-red in color.Among the notable buildings where Tennessee marble is used as a building stone are two in
Washington, D.C. : theNational Gallery of Art , which uses stone from Knox and Blount counties, and theUnited States Capitol , which has stairways constructed from Hawkins County marble. [" [http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/stones/descriptions.html Descriptions and Origins of Selected Principal Building Stones of Washington] ",U.S. Geological Survey , revised 1-14-99, accessed December 23, 2007.]References
General
* [http://www.cagenweb.com/quarries/articles_and_books/min_res_appalachian_region/mineral_commodities_5.html Mineral Commodities] , in "Mineral Resources of the Appalachian Region",
U.S. Geological Survey andU.S. Bureau of Mines , Geological Survey Professional Paper 580, 1968.Notes
External links
* [http://www.knoxnews.com/news/2008/aug/26/knoxvilles-marble-past/ Knoxville's marble past] , "
Knoxville News Sentinel ", August 26, 2008 (article and videos)
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