sandstone$71949$ - translation to greek
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sandstone$71949$ - translation to greek

MEDIUM TO COARSE-GRAINED QUARTZ SANDSTONE WITH MINOR SHALE AND LAMINITE LENSES.
Hawkesbury sandstone; Hawkesbury Sandstone; Yellowblock
  • Pyrmont]]
  • Weathered 19th century wall of Sydney sandstone
  • Argyle Cut
  • Contemporary wall of Sydney sandstone
  • Discarded blocks of Sydney sandstone
  • Neoclassical style]]
  • Newington College<br>Memorial to the Dead, 1914–1918, designed by William Hardy Wilson
  • In Pyrmont, sandstone adorns the wall outside the Ibis Darling Harbour Hotel.
  • Neo-Romanesque style]]
  • Tamarama beach]]
  • Gothic revival style]]
  • [[Campbell's Stores]], sandstone buildings in [[The Rocks, Sydney]]
  • Sydney University Great Hall Sandstone Crest (one of a series)
  • Berowra]]
  • Sandstone cliffs, [[Sydney Heads]].

sandstone      
n. αμμόπετρα, αμμόλιθος

Definition

sandstone
(sandstones)
Sandstone is a type of rock which contains a lot of sand. It is often used for building houses and walls.
...sandstone cliffs.
N-MASS

Wikipedia

Sydney sandstone

Sydney sandstone is the common name for Sydney Basin Hawkesbury Sandstone, one variety of which is historically known as Yellowblock, and also as "yellow gold" a sedimentary rock named after the Hawkesbury River north of Sydney, where this sandstone is particularly common.

It forms the bedrock for much of the region of Sydney, Australia. Well known for its durable quality, it is the reason many Aboriginal rock carvings and drawings in the area still exist. As a highly favoured building material, especially preferred during the city's early years—from the late 1790s to the 1890s—its use, particularly in public buildings, gives the city its distinctive appearance.

The stone is notable for its geological characteristics; its relationship to Sydney's vegetation and topography; the history of the quarries that worked it; and the quality of the buildings and sculptures constructed from it. This bedrock gives the city some of its "personality" by dint of its meteorological, horticultural, aesthetic and historical impact. One author describes Sydney's sandstone as "a kind of base note, an ever-present reminder of its Georgian beginnings and more ancient past."

Sydney sandstone was deposited in the Triassic Period probably in a freshwater delta and is the caprock which controls the erosion and scarp retreat of the Illawarra escarpment. Sandstone escarpments box in the Sydney area on three sides: to the west the Blue Mountains, and to the north and south, the Hornsby Plateau and Woronora Plateau. These escarpments kept Sydney in its bounds and some people still regard the spatial boundaries of the city in these terms.