Yule Marble

39°2.16′N 107°10.10′W / 39.03600°N 107.16833°W / 39.03600; -107.16833 (Quarry site)

Lincoln Memorial: exterior is all Yule marble
The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington is Yule marble

Yule Marble is a marble of metamorphosed Leadville Limestone found only in the Yule Creek Valley, in the West Elk Mountains of Colorado, 2.8 miles (4.5 km) southeast of the town of Marble, Colorado.[1] First discovered in 1873, it is quarried underground at an elevation of 9,300 feet (2,800 m) above sea level—in contrast to most marble, which is quarried from an open pit and at much lower elevations.[2][3]

The localized geology created a marble that is 99.5% pure calcite, with a grain structure that gives a smooth texture, a homogeneous look, and a luminous surface. It is these qualities for which it was selected to clad the exterior of the Lincoln Memorial and a variety of other buildings throughout the United States, in spite of being more expensive than other marbles. The size of the deposits enables large blocks to be quarried, which is why the marble for the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery, with its 56-long-ton (57 t) die block, was quarried from Yule Marble.[2][3][4][5]

Yule's quality comes at a high price due to the cost of quarrying in a high-altitude mountain environment. This challenge has caused the industry and the town of Marble to undergo many boom-and-bust periods since quarrying started in the mid-1880s, making the town emblematic of the economic fluctuations that beset a single-industry economy. Technology advancements in quarrying machinery and transportation have reduced, but not solved, the cost problem that afflicts the operation through the present.[3][5]

  1. ^ Marble Quadrangle, Colorado; USGS 7.5-minute series topographic quadrangle, Dated 1960, revised 1987
  2. ^ a b "Colorado Yule Marble – Building Stone of the Lincoln Memorial"; US Geological Survey – Bulletin 2162; 1999 (Extensive technical analysis of Yule marble composition vs other marbles)" (PDF). Retrieved 19 November 2011.
  3. ^ a b c Vandenbusche, Duane; Myers, Rex (February 1996). Marble Colorado: City of Stone (6th ed.). Denver, Colorado: Golden Bell Press.
  4. ^ Boughner, H.D. (March 1908). Colorado-Yule Marble Company: Reports of Engineers and Marble Experts. New York: Knickerbocker Syndicate.
  5. ^ a b McCollum, Oscar D. (1992). MARBLE, A Town Built on Dreams. Vol. 1, 2. Denver, Colorado: Sundance Publications Ltd.

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