Concrete -Foundation Of The Future

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Warren G. Burres
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
14
File Size:
470 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1971

Abstract

or more than 50 years the Portland Cement Association has represented the United States cement industry in matters relating to the technology and use of cement and concrete. Interestingly enough, PCA?s emphasis has been on concrete and its uses rather than on Portland cement. The cement industry realized long ago that cement is basic and serves its fundamental purpose as an ingredient in concrete. Cement could never be successful if concrete were not. Work with the users and specifiers of concrete had to be done at its end point of application--in a building, bridge, dam, highway or home. PCA, over its half century of existence, has been dedicated to this job. I should like to talk to you today on the less technical side of concrete--what it has been--what it is today--and what it can offer in future construction. Concrete, in many forms, has a long background extending from such notable historic times as the Roman Empire. Here, concrete made from pozzolanic cement from the slopes of Mt. Vesuvius was used to construct the Coliseum, home of the Roman circus; for the Appian Way, the ancient forerunner of the Interstate system; and the miles of aqueducts throughout Europe, many of which still carry water. In 1811 Joseph Asppin, an English bricklayer, made the first modern cement by the artificial mixing of pulverized limestone and clay materials. Ht,
Citation

APA: Warren G. Burres  (1971)  Concrete -Foundation Of The Future

MLA: Warren G. Burres Concrete -Foundation Of The Future. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1971.

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