So, do you have a pic of the quartzite? I'm not familiar with it, but for internet images.
Quartzite is just sandstone that has been metamorphosed. Add heat and pressure from deep in the tectonic zones and plain ole’ sandstone, that will not survive a regular erosion process for long, changes into quartzite. A stone harder and tougher than granite. The higher the percentage of quartz grains in the sand the larger and longer the quartz crystals in the stone.
The people at the rock yard where we bought it told us that it weighed 20-25 lbs per square ft. I am sure that’s an average per sq. ft. of area for your project. We layed in close to 500 sq. ft. As you can see some of the pieces are a good size. A couple had to have been pushing 200 lbs.
We are in the process of converting the entire front yard to desert landscaping.
It’s a beautiful stone. It sparkles in the sunlight. The spiral pattern in the layout was my wife’s idea and she spent many hours laying them, replacing them and making sure it was visible as a spiral as you approach. The black stone in the center, the singularity (her term), came from Ballarat, CA. A mining ghost town on the west side of Death Valley. An old weathered inhabitant (a funny story) of the site helped her pick it out.
She had numbered the stones as she went so she would keep track of how they were assembled. Unfortunately, I noticed and mentioned to her that the total number of stones that make up the spiral was, 42! She thought that was exciting and has kept reminding me that it is a significant occurrence. Oh, well!
| The quartzite came on 4’x4’ pallets each weighed over 2 tons. We bought 2-1/2 pallets. Yep! A little over 5 tons of rock. We moved it all by hand. Hence the joint and muscle pain! |
| The spiral on the edge of the entryway. |
| A close-up of the spiral. |
| The snake on the side! |
The snake design is on the opposite side of the driveway. Is made from small boulders with stones found at the same rock yard as we bought the quartzite. If you zoom in on the head you will see it is a perfectly shaped boulder for a snake head.
The eyes we found at a rock hound’s shop on Hwy. 95 in west central Nevada near Goldfield. A blue-eyed snake!
Duane