Cockeysville Marble

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cockeysville Marble
Stratigraphic range: Precambrian, Cambrian, or Ordovician
Marble Cockeysville Plate XXI WBClark 1898.jpg
Polished slab of the marble from Cockeysville. Width of slab inside black border is approximately 10.7 cm.
Typemetamorphic
Unit ofGlenarm Supergroup
UnderliesWissahickon Formation
OverliesSetters Formation
Thicknessabout 750 feet[1]
Lithology
Primarymarble
Location
RegionPiedmont of Maryland
Type section
Named forCockeysville, Maryland
Named byWilliams and Darton, 1892[2]

The Cockeysville Marble is a Precambrian, Cambrian, or Ordovician marble formation in Baltimore, Carroll, Harford and Howard Counties, Maryland. It is described as a predominantly metadolomite, calc-schist, and calcite marble, with calc-gneiss and calc-silicate marble being widespread but minor.[1]

Sample of Massive Metadolostone Member of Cockeysville Marble, from old quarry near Lower Dam of Loch Raven Reservoir, Baltimore County, Maryland

The extent of this formation was originally mapped in 1892[2] within Baltimore County.

Quarrying[]

The Beaver Dam Quarry in Cockeysville, c. 1898
Boulder outside the Marriottsville quarry

The Cockeysville Marble has been quarried in Beaver Dam within Cockeysville and other locations in Maryland. A historical account is given in Maryland Geological Survey Volume Two.[3]

The Cockeysville was also mined for crushed stone at what is now called Quarry Lake.[4] It was known as the McMahon Quarry in the 1940s.

The Cockeysville was mined by Lafarge and by Martin Marietta Inc. at the Marriottsville Quarry, Marrtiottsville, Maryland.

The Washington Monument in Baltimore and the one in Washington, D.C. are constructed from the Cockeysville Marble.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b Geologic Map of Maryland, 1968. Cleaves, E. T., Edwards, J. Jr., and Glaser, J. D. Maryland Geological Survey. Scale 1:250,000.
  2. ^ a b Williams, G.H., and Darton, N.H., 1892, Geologic map of Baltimore and vicinity: U.S. Geological Survey, Map to accompany "Guide to Baltimore".
  3. ^ Maryland Geological Survey Volume Two, by W. B. Clark, 1898. Johns Hopkins University Press. (Google Books)
  4. ^ McMahon Quarry (Greensberg Quarry), Bare Hills, Baltimore Co., Maryland, USA
Retrieved from ""