Where Does Slate Come From?
Slate is a fine grained, crystalline rock derived from sediments of
clay and fine silt which were deposited on ancient sea bottoms. Superimposed
materials gradually consolidated the sedimentary particles into bedded
deposits of shale. Mountain building forces subsequently folded, crumpled,
and compressed the shale. At the same time, intense heat and pressure changed
the original clays into new minerals such as mica, chlorite, and quartz.
By such mechanical and chemical processes bedded clays were transformed,
or metamorphosed, into slate, whole geologic ages being consumed in the
process. Slates vary in composition, structure, and durability because
the degree to which their determinant minerals have been altered is neither
uniform nor consistent.
These traditional slater's tools are used to cut and trim, hammer, measure, and rip out nails. Photo: Jeffrey S. Levine.
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The adaptation of slate for roofing purposes is inextricably linked
to its genesis. The manufacturing processes of nature have endowed slate
with certain commercially amenable properties which have had a profound
influence on the methods by which slate is quarried and fabricated, as well as its suitability for use as a roofing tile.
Slate roofing tiles are still manufactured by hand using traditional
methods in a five step process: cutting, sculping, splitting, trimming,
and hole punching. In the manufacturing process, large, irregular blocks
taken from the quarry are first cut with a saw across the grain in sections
slightly longer than the length of the finished roofing slate. The blocks
are next sculped, or split along the grain of the slate, to widths slightly
larger than the widths of finished slates. Sculping is generally accomplished
with a mallet and a broadfaced chisel, although some types of slate must
be cut along their grain. In the splitting area, the slightly oversized
blocks are split along their cleavage planes to the desired shingle thickness.
The splitter's tools consist of a wooden mallet and two splitting chisels
used for prying the block into halves and repeating this process until
the desired thinness is reached. The last two steps involve
trimming the tile to the desired size and then punching two nail holes
toward the top of the slate using a formula based on the size and exposure
of the slate.
Minerals, the building blocks of rocks, through their characteristic
crystalline structures define the physical properties of the rocks which
they compose. Slate consists of minerals that are stable and resistant
to weathering and is, therefore, generally of high strength, low porosity,
and low absorption. The low porosity and low absorption of slate mitigate
the deleterious action of frost on the stone and make it well adapted for
roofing purposes. The two most important structural properties of slate
are cleavage and grain.