Sandstone |
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Sandstone, sedimentary
rock formed by the cementing together of grains of sand. The usual cementing
material in sandstone is calcium carbonate, iron oxides, or silica, and
the hardness of sandstone varies according to the character of the cementing
material; quartz sandstones cemented with quartz are the hardest. Sandstones
are commonly gray, buff, red, or brown although green and some other colors
are also found. Green sandstones often contain, in addition to sand and
glauconite, fossil shells and iron oxides; those that break apart easily
are known as greensands and are sometimes used to replenish depleted potash
in soils. Sandstones are widely used in construction and industry. Varieties
of sandstone include arkose, which contains feldspar and resembles granite,
and graywacke, a gray or sometimes greenish or black rock composed of
quartz and fledspar with numerous fragments of other rocks, such as shale,
slate, quartzite, granite, and basalt. Sandstone may be crushed to the
form of loose sand grains, which can then be put to the same industrial
uses as sand. See brownstone. |