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A screenshot of Lakeview Manor during construction. The player must collect materials and resources to build it. Hearthfire allows the player character to purchase a plot of land and build their own home from raw materials such as lumber and clay, with the option of adding features such as greenhouses, bee hives, and alchemy and enchanting facilities.
Golden Hill quarry, is a former granite quarry on Golden Hill, adjacent to the village of Manor Kilbride, County Wicklow, Ireland. [2] [3] Its exact coordinates are unknown.Dr. Patrick Wyse Jackson, curator of the Geological Museum at Trinity College Dublin, hypothesised that the Golden Hill granite was so named due to it having been partially weathered in situ, with the result that the ...
The Fort Riley Limestone is a Kansas Permian stratigraphic unit of member rank and historic building stone, sold commercially as fine-grained Silverdale, having at one time been quarried at Silverdale, Kansas. [4]
Bramley Fall stone is a notable type of Millstone Grit sourced from around the village of Bramley, near Leeds. [7] Some of the sandstones serve as aquifers into which numerous wells and boreholes have been sunk to provide local water supplies. [8] Crushed gritstone is also used as aggregate in path and road construction.
Stone was extracted by the "room and pillar" method, by which chambers were mined, leaving pillars of stone to support the roof. [1] These mines were once owned by Postmaster General Ralph Allen (1694–1764). The mines contain a range of features including well preserved tramways, cart-roads and crane bases.
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.
Stonyfell quarry, c.1923. James Edlin opened the first quarry in the hundred of Adelaide on Section 1050 in 1837, to supply building stone and slate to local builders. G. Walker Johnson and Arthur Hardy took over the quarry by 1850 and it became known as Beacon Hill Quarry. [4] [5]
The quarry was renamed Torr Works (after Ron Torr, the Chief Engineer) on 19 August 1970. [3] It has been operated by Aggregate Industries since their take over of Foster Yeoman in 2006. [4] The site employs over 250 people and produces 7.5 million tonnes of limestone annually which is carried directly from the quarry by Mendip Rail. [5]