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Publications : Papers
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| Some Aspects of the Manufacture of Portland Cement |
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Papers : Published in 1978
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Author: D Gallop
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Portland cement is a finely ground mineral
powder obtained by intergrinding a mixture of 95 parts of clinker and five parts
of gypsum. It is the generic name for hydraulic cement a man made product which
hardens in the presence of water. Today's cement started formally with a patent
granted in 1824 to Joseph Aspdin, a Leeds bricklayer. He called his patented
cement 'Portland' because it resembled a gray brown stone quarried on the Isle
of Portland off the coast of England. The first cement to be made in the
southern hemisphere is accredited to Nathaniel Wilson, a pioneer farmer who with
his brother John began experimenting in 1874 with the limestone on their
property near Warkworth. In 1884 they produced the first Portland Cement to be
made in this part of the world.
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