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These structures were well built, with lime cemented stones and stood twelve feet high.
The top of the passage had been reinforced with metal crossbeams and cemented stones.
It was formed of cemented stones.
This saline solution is absorbed into the concrete, where it can begin to dissolve cement stone, which is of primary structural importance.
The site was desecrated several more times until 1928 when the monks who then owned the cemetery built a cemented stone cairn above the site.
A sideline for the Hampton fishermen was cement stones, because they were found on the Hampton fishing grounds.
Virtual stalactites can be formed in some cases as a result of dissolved cement stone, hanging off cracks in concrete structures.
But the two scientists were shown several teeth and some skeletal scraps that the Vietnamese had excavated from the same stratum of naturally cemented stone.
Since primary efflorescence brings out salts that are not ordinarily part of the cement stone, it is not a structural, but, rather, an aesthetic concern.
Secondary efflorescence is named such as it does not occur as a result of the forming of the cement stone or its accompanying hydration products.
Like most other Polish Cathedrals, it was originally designed with an exterior of brick and terracotta, which was later changed to white imitation cement stone.
Despite the use of expanding or shrinkage-compensating ingredients, users are ordinarily cautioned to avoid environments detrimental to the forming of cement stone.
The opening was, it is true, closed up with a wall of cemented stones, which it would be necessary to sacrifice, but that could easily be rebuilt.
They are best developed about Kirkbean, where they include a basal red breccia followed by conglomerates, grits and cement stones of Calciferous Sandstone age.
This attribution is reinforced by the morphology of its construction: a base of irregular lose stone, with cemented stone and earth, typical of other Umayyad military installations of the time.
The first cement manufacturing works near Swanscombe were opened at Northfleet by James Parker, around 1792, making "Roman cement" from cement stone brought from the Isle of Sheppey.
The Romans built a high-quality road, with layers of cemented stone over a layer of small stones, crowned, drainage ditches on either side, low retaining walls on sunken portions, and dirt pathways for sidewalks.
Those, they had cleared enough that the water seeped up again, into holding pools created from cementing stones together and lining the inside with ceramic tiles, not as the old pools had been, carved out of the rock.
By the 1870s industry would be producing steel in vast amounts, and mining for coal, alum, jet, cement stone concretions, shale and potash from the hills, as well as employing sandstone and limestone quarries to gather raw materials.
A shallow tunnel, 3 m wide and 2.2 m high, was excavated by blasting and extended outwards by cemented stone walls and a concrete roof to a total length of 10.5 m. This space was divided into three small rooms by wooden partitions and a stone instrument platform built in front of it.