Dalbeattie Granite

Dalbeattie Granite was sourced from numerous quarries near the village of Dalbeattie, in Kirkcudbrightshire. The stone comes from the Criffel Granodiorite-granite Pluton, a large, elongate intrusion that formed during the early part of the Devonian Period (c. 400 million years ago) when Scotland was south of the Equator at roughly the same latitude as northern Angola is today. Dalbeattie Granite was used locally, regionally and nationally, mainly to form masonry and paving. Dalbeattie Granite is not quarried for building stone today.

Building Stone ID 10,122

Geological description

Rock category  
Igneous rock
Stone type  
Granite / Granitic-rock
Source bedrock unit  
Criffel Granodiorite–granite Pluton
Colour  
Medium pinkish grey to medium grey
Grain-size  
Coarse crystalline (2 to 16 mm)
Cohesion  
Strongly cohesive
Water absorption  
Very low
Key constituents  
Biotite
Texture  
Texturally uniform and weakly porphyritic

Historic significance

Maximum historical geographic reach  
National (score = 3)
Extent of historic building stone quarrying  
Extensive (score = 3)
Historic significance score  
Highly significant (score = 6)

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