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Nastasha Cusack
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More About Soapstone

Soapstone is quarried like Granite and Marble. It is a steatite stone and its primary components are magnesite, dolomite, chlorite, and talc. It can range in age from 300 to 400 million years old depending on which part of the planet it is drawn from. As talc in soapstone is soft to the touch, it gives the smooth feeling of rubbing a piece of dry soap. Thus the name was derived - "Soap" Stone. No. You can't wash with it.

For thousands of years, soapstone has been used throughout the world for tools, carafes, vases, goblets, sculptures, fireplaces, etc. In early American history, soapstone was used primarily for building blocks, sculpting and urns. As villages and towns began building home structures, a popular choice for the do-it-all sink was soapstone. It could be easily cut to shape with non stone cutting tools. Four styles of common sinks from the 1800's and early 1900's were the Philadelphia, Chicago-Wright, Boston-Williams and the good old New England Double Bowl (our most popular). In early New England, Soapstone uses ranged from fireplace hearths to countertops, sinks, and oven fireplace stoves. In different parts of the world, soapstone is still used as a daily staple for mixing bowls, cook-tops, cookware, and oven baking decks. Currently in the USA and in different parts of the world, soapstone is used for the largest variety of items ever yet - including balusters, stair treads, window sills and island tops. It's fast becoming a very popular choice by designers and architects and it's one of a kind texture and look make soapstone one of the most aesthetically pleasing stones to be used for the job.

True Soapstone is inert. Alkalis and acids won't affect it as they will a granite, marble, or slate. For over one hundred years, soapstone sinks and tiles have been used in science class rooms and labs along with work tables and counter tops. Its longevity to long term - high traffic use is amazing!

Because of its truly remarkable and natural heat retention characteristics, soapstone is widely used for masonry heater fireplaces, wood stoves, fireplace liners and pizza ovens. Soapstone heaters and fireplaces heat very quickly from burning coal, pellets or wood, the soapstone will then slowly radiate heat very evenly for hours on end. Even after the fire has long gone out!

Soapstone

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The lid of a pyrophyllite  box. The lid is 4 inches wide (10 cm).
The lid of a pyrophyllite box. The lid is 4 inches wide (10 cm).

Soapstone (also known as steatite or soaprock) is a metamorphic rock, a talc-schist. It is largely composed of the mineral talc and is rich in magnesium. It is produced by dynamothermal metamorphism, which occurs at the areas where tectonic plates are subducted, changing rocks by heat and pressure, with influx of fluids, but without melting. It has been a medium for carving for thousands of years.

Contents

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 Petrology

A block of talc
A block of talc

Petrologically, soapstone is composed dominantly of talc, with varying amounts of chlorite and amphiboles (typically tremolite, anthophyllite, and magnesiocummingtonite), and trace to minor FeCr-oxides. It may be schistose or massive. Soapstone is formed by the metamorphism of ultramafic protoliths (e.g. dunite or serpentinite) and the metasomatism of siliceous dolostones.

Pyrophyllite, a mineral very similar to talc is sometimes called soapstone in the generic sense since its physical characteristics and industrial uses are similar, and because it is also commonly used as a carving material. However this stone typically does not have such a soapy feel from which soapstone derives its name. Physical characteristics and uses

It is relatively soft (because of the high talc content, talc being 1 on Mohs hardness scale), and may feel soapy when touched, hence the name. Soapstone is used for inlaid designs, sculpture, coasters, and kitchen countertops and sinks. Traditional Inuit carvings often use soapstone, and some Native American groups made bowls, cooking slabs, and other objects from soapstone, particularly during the Late Archaic archaeological period. Due to its chemical stability and resistance to acid, soapstone is the most commonly used material for chemistry lab counter and sink surfaces.[citation needed] Soapstone is sometimes used for fireplace surrounds and woodstoves because it can absorb and evenly distribute heat while being easy to manufacture. This is found in some Alaskan homes. It is also used for griddles and other cookware.

Tepe Yahya,Ancient trading city, southeastern Iran, was a centre for the production and distribution of soapstone in the 5th–3rd millennia BC[1]

Soapstone has been used in India for centuries as a soft medium for carving, but unfortunately the world wide demand for soapstone is threatening the tiger's habitat.[2] The Hoysala Empire temples were made from soapstone.[3]

Soapstone markers are used by welders and fabricators as a marker because, due to its resistance to heat, it remains visible when heat is applied.[citation needed] Soapstone is used to create molds for the casting of pewter objects.

Soapstone smoking pipes are found, for example, in Native American Indian artifacts.[citation needed]

Locally quarried soapstone was used as gravemarkers in 19th-century northeast Georgia around Dahlonega and Cleveland, as simple field stone and "slot and tab" tombs.

An Egyptian carved and glazed steatite scarab amulet.
An Egyptian carved and glazed steatite scarab amulet.

The term steatite is sometimes used for soapstone. It is also a type of ceramic material made from soapstone with minor additives and heated to vitrify (to change or make into glass or a glassy substance, especially through heat fusion). It is often used as an insulator or housing for electrical components, due to its durability and electrical characteristics and because it can be pressed into complex shapes before firing. It was used for beads and seals in ancient civilizations. When steatite is fired at high temperature it produces a much harder variation known as instatite.[citation needed]

 Other names

Kisii stone from Kenya is a type of pyrophyllite used by the Kisii people of the Tabaka Hills in Western Kenya. They use this material to make pots, used to carry fat for massaging into their skin to guard against the elements.

Combarbalite stone, exclusively mined in Combarbala, Chile, is known for its many colors. While they are not visible during mining, they come out after refining.

Palewa and gorara stones are types of Indian soapstone.

A variety of other regional and marketing names for soapstone are used.[4]

 See also

Steatite in its raw mineral form
Steatite in its raw mineral form

 Notes

  1. ^ ("Tepe Yahya." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2004. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. 3 Jan. 2004 <http://concise.britannica.com/ebc/article-9380473/Tepe-Yahya>.)
  2. ^ West's love of talc threatens India's tigers. Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
  3. ^ Belur, Halebid and Sravanabelagola. Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
  4. ^ http://www.cst.cmich.edu/USERS/DIETR1RV/soapstone.htm

Copyright Nastasha Cusack 2008

 

 

Mother Earth Reflections
Nastasha Cusack
BC
Canada