Abstract

The Buena Vista Member of the Mississippian Cuyahoga Formation is an economically valuable freestone that is homogeneous with almost no sedimentary structures. The Buena Vista was one of the earliest clastic rocks quarried in Ohio. Early quarries dating at least back to 1814 were located in the hills on the north bank of the Ohio River near the village of Buena Vista, south-central Ohio. By the 1830s, quarries had also opened up along the route of the Ohio & Erie Canal in the Portsmouth area to the east; followed by quarries that opened along a railway line that ran north up the Scioto River valley. Waterways transported the Buena Vista to many cities and towns, including Cincinnati, Ohio, Louisville, Kentucky, and Evansville, Indiana, on the Ohio River, New Orleans on the Mississippi River, and Dayton and Columbus on the Ohio canal system. Later railways transported this stone further afield to Illinois, Wisconsin, and Alberta. Census reports, industry magazines, and other historical accounts document the use of this stone across much of the eastern US and into Canada. Historically, it has been used for a variety of items, including entire buildings, canal structures, fence posts, and laundry tubs. Some 19th-century structures built with this stone remain in cities where it was once commonly used. Literature reviews, field observations, and lab analyses are here compiled as a useful reference to both the urban and field geologist in the identification of the Buena Vista Member, a historically important building stone, in buildings and outcrops, respectively.

Highlights

  • Stone from the Buena Vista Member of the Cuyahoga Formation was once thought of as “one of the finest building stones of the country” (Orton 1891)

  • The type locality for the Buena Vista Member was described by Orton (1874) at the town of Buena Vista located in Scioto County in south-central Ohio (Fig. 1)

  • The purpose of this paper is to review the quarrying history of the Buena Vista Member in southern Ohio; identify and document existing buildings made of this stone; and to provide petrographic characteristics of the Buena Vista Member for identification

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Stone from the Buena Vista Member of the Cuyahoga Formation was once thought of as “one of the finest building stones of the country” (Orton 1891). A fine-grained homogeneous sandstone, the Buena Vista Member was extremely popular with architects in the early 19th century and was shipped to many cities around the country. It continues to be quarried, but only in limited quantities for building stone. The Buena Vista Member occurs stratigraphically near the bottom of the Lower Mississippian Cuyahoga Formation (Fig. 2), but above the similar looking and generally coarser Upper Devonian Berea Sandstone. The Buena Vista Member crops out in a roughly north northeast-south southwest

QUARRYING HISTORY AND USE OF THE BUENA VISTA FREESTONE
PUBLISHED NOMENCLATURE
QUARRYING HISTORY
Date Finished
ROCK DESCRIPTION Petrology
BUILDING STONE CHARACTERISTICS Durability as a Building Stone
Proveniencing Historical Material
CONCLUSION
LITERATURE CITED
Full Text
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