Steel is still used but now most cutting and polishing tools are impregnated with tiny diamonds, which can cut faster and with less heat build up, though water is still required to keep things cool. The new tools are much safer, too, because there is no longer the chance of steel cable, which could be thousands of feet long, breaking and uncontrollably whipping around a quarry yard.
Q - What about for transporting the stone?
A Very, very large wheeled-machines, such as trucks and front-end loaders revolutionized quarrying. As I discussed in several chapters, in the old days, quarrymen historically moved stone with a derrick and pulley system. Derricks required several men to work them and could be dangerous; if the cable broke a multi-ton block would drop and crush anything in its way. Prior to derricks much of the transport involved moving blocks with ropes and logs, a process that lead to two, massive marble columns almost killing Michelangelo. Now, men (I use this pronoun because there are hardly any woman in the quarry industry) load and move all stone with wheeled vehicles.
Q Are any of the techniques for acquiring the stone you describe still in use today?
A The plug-and-feather process has been in use for several thousand years. This involves drilling a row of holes in the rock and driving in wedges to split the rock along the row. If you look at many stone buildings, particularly older ones, you may encounter these holes, which are six to eight inches deep and always extend down from the edge of a rock. Oddly, even though the Egyptians used the plug-and-feather process, it wasn’t introduced into the United States until 1803, when a Mr. Tarbox used it in Salem, Massachusetts. He features prominently in my chapter on the Quincy granite.
Q Have these techniques been modified to keep up with advances in technology?
A The main modifications again are in the machinery. When Mr. Tarbox made his holes, he used a hand tool, more akin to punching a hole than to drilling. After making the hole, he would drop in two shims (the feathers), bent at the top so they wouldn’t drop into the hole, and then place his wedge, or plug, and start pounding the plug in with a hammer.
Now, holes are drilled out with hydraulic drills. People still use the hammer for pounding in the plugs though some in the trade have introduced a hydraulic expander to force the stone apart. In the words of one older quarry owner, “We were a lot tougher back then.”
Q Where does most of the stone in use today come from?
Q How is this stone transported?
Q Is there any exciting innovation coming up on the technology/transportation horizon?
A Not that I know of though when I was visiting a stone yard in Minnesota I did see a machine that used a jet of water to cut stone. The water shot out at over 900-mph at pressures of up 60,000 pounds per square inch and could cut a 4-inch thick slab of stone. That was pretty cool though water jets are more for precision work than large scale cutting. And in regard to transport, moving stone is simply a matter of battling gravity and trucks are great at moving dead weight.