Seneca sandstone

  1. Home
  2. top of the aat hierarchies
  3. Materials Facet
  4. Materials (hierarchy name)
  5. materials (substances)
  6. [materials by composition]
  7. inorganic material
  8. rock (inorganic material)
  9. sedimentary rock
  10. [sedimentary rock by composition]
  11. sandstone
  12. [sandstone by composition]
  13. ferruginous sandstone
  14. brownstone (material)
  15. Seneca sandstone
Scope note
A fine-grained red, reddish-brown, and gray sandstone from Seneca Creek, Maryland; it contains coarse- to fine-grained angular quartz as well as some feldspar and mica fragments. It is fairly easy to carve but darkens and hardens when exposed to air, making it one of the most durable building stones. Seneca sandstone was extremely popular in Washington, D.C. during the 'brownstone era' of about 1840 to 1880; the original Smithsonian Institution building, for example, is made of Seneca sandstone.
Seneca sandstone
Accepted term: 29-Apr-2024