Earth connections: resources for teaching earth science - reading a wall

Saturday, November 24, 2001

Washington Geology, Volume 28, No. 3. May 2001.

by: Wendy Gerstel

Have you ever looked at a stone wall and wondered where all the different rocks came from and what story each might tell? Some stone walls are made of angular rocks, probably mined from a quarry. Others are made of rounded stones. Observing the differences in shape, size, color, mineralogy, and other characteristics of the stones in a wall can tell us a lot about the history of the stones and of the wall. Stone wall builders usually take advantage of the most readily available and, of course, best looking materials. Walls can be used to support a building or to hold back a hillside or as decorative landscaping (Fig. 1). Here in western Washington, many of the walls, such as those facing the buildings on the Capital Campus, are built of angular stones quarried from the Wilkeson Sandstone near Tenino. In eastern Washington, many walls are made of basalt because of the abundance of that rock type there. A wide variety of metamorphic rocks can be found in the walls of north-central Washington.

In the Puget Sound area, we have an abundance of rounded stones of all sizes, carried here by glaciers that covered the area about 13,000 years ago. These stones have been tumbled, scraped, rolled, smoothed, and sculpted by the ice and its meltwater streams. The more rounded the stones, the longer they were rolled in streams. If they are faceted, that is, have rounded but distinct faces, they were probably deposited directly by the ice.

Rounded stones do not fit snugly against other stones in a wall and usually need mortar to hold them together. In New England and other areas on glacial deposits, however, farmers build walls with the stones cleared from their fields. Careful placement of the stones and annual spring maintenance preserve many miles of these walls built without any mortar. In Figure 2, the larger stones are at the bottom so they were probably put in place by hand. The smaller ones could be lifted, so were used in the upper layers.

This lesson will teach observation, analytic, and note-taking skills. It will encourage the observer to think about geology, history, transportation, engineering, and social sciences - and other aspects of wall building left to the creativity of the participants.


Questions

Find your own stone wall and answer the following questions:

1. What do you notice about the shape of the individual stones? Are all of them rounded? Are any of them angular? Are some of them faceted? Was it built for decoration, to protect a garden, or to support a structure?
2. Did the wall builders use Mortar? Why is this important? Could the wall have been built without it? What is the mortar made from?
3. What can you say about the color of the stones? Look closely. Do you recognize any of them from Washington State? From Canada? From Idaho? What do you notice about the mineralogy - the individual crystals within a stone?
4. How did the stones get here? Are they local? Were they transported by glaciers or streams, by trucks or trains?
5. Note the size and relative placement of the stones in the wall. Is this important? Does it tell you anything about how the wall was built - by humans or machine?
6. What can you say about the age of the wall? What do the surroundings (the building, the landscaping, the rock source, etc.) tell you? What condition is the wall in?

Discussion

1. How does geology control/affect the availability of building materials and how they are used? And how does access to and transportation of the materials affect their use?
2. What can you say about the age of a wall and the use of particular materials? (How far they were transported? How they were put into place, etc.?)
3. How might the function of a wall have changed through human history in an area? In different areas, climates, cultures?
4. What are the advantages/disadvantages of stone walls? As compared to wooden fences? (Costs, resource availability, other?).
5. What might cause a wall to degrade or weather (chemical and mechanical [wind and water] break down)? Which would be more susceptible to weathering, a rounded wall or a wall of blocky, tight-fitting stones?

References

Articles

Guide to Geologic, Mineral, Fossil, and Mining History Displays in Washington, by David A. Knoblach: Washington Geology, v. 22, no. 4, p. 11-17, 1994.

The H.P. Scheel Family - A History in Stone, by David A. Knoblach: Washington Geology, v. 27, no. 1, p. 18, 1999.

Washington's Stone Industry - A History, by David A. Knoblach: Washington Geology, v. 21, no. 4, p. 2-17, 1993.

Books

Rocks and Minerals and the Stories They Tell, by Robert Irving, illustrated by Ida Scheib: Knopf, 175p. 1956.

Rocks and Minerals - Student Activity Book, by the National Science Resources Center, Smithsonian Institution, National Academy of Science: Carolina Biological Supply Co., 153 p., 1994.

Sermons in Stone - The Stone Walls of New England & New York, by Susan Allport with ink drawings by David Howell: W.W. Norton & Co. 205p. 1990.

Time worships a well-built wall, for a wall's stones can wend through silent woods with an eerie eloquence, suggesting the lives and labours of settlers long gone. As Susan Allport demonstrates in this charming book, the stone walls of New England and New York speak with the voices of Native Americans and Yankee farmers, of slaves, servants, and children, evoking the past from the elemental geological struggles of the Ice Age through the fencing dilemmas of neighbors in the 19th century. Allport's scaling of these humble but pervasive walls - who built them? When? Why? How? - is a narrative of fascinating and offbeat attention to the enduring tracks of the past [downloaded January 1, 2001, from http://www.commonreader.com/cgi-bin/rbox/ido.cgi?7248].

Stone Wall Secrets by Kristine and Robert Thorson: Tilbury House Publishers, 40 p. 1998. [grades 3-6]
Stone Wall Secrets - Exploring Geology in the Classroom (Teachers' Guide), by Ruth Deike: Tilbury House Publishers, 80 p. 1998.

Website

Discovery.com has lessons, weblinks, and vocabulary at http://school.discovery.com/lessonplans/programs/rocks/index.html.


Essential science learning benchmarks/objectives

1.1 Uses Properties to identify, describe and catergorize landforms.
3.2 Understands that science and technology are human endeavors, interrelated to each other, to society. And to the workplace.

Grade levels

Grades 2-6, answer questions 1-3.
Grades 7-12, answer questions 1-6.

Subjects

Earth science
Geography
Social science
Mechanics/engineering

Concepts

Interpreting geologic origin of building materials and methods of transport and use.

Skills

Observations; identifying relationships of rocks to where they originated; hypothesizing rock transport.

Time needed

30-45 minutes (more if field trip)

"The small stones which fill up the crevices have almost as much to do with making the fair and firm wall as the great rocks, so wise use of spare moments contributes not a little to the building up in good proportions a man's mind." (Edwin Paxton Hood)

Lesson created by:

Wendy Gerstel, Washington Division of Geology and Earth Resources, 
P.O. Box 47007, Olympia, 
WA 98405-7007
e-mail: geology@wadnr.gov

Permission is granted to photocopy these lessons. Copyright has been waived.