Limestone
has been the main rock produced in Somerset and increasingly large
proportions of this have been won from Mendip. Almost all the stone
quarried is now used as aggregates, mainly for making roads (with
andesite for the surface and limestone for the lower road courses)
and for concrete. Many of the larger quarry operators now have
specialised tar coating plants for road stone, or concrete block-works
making a variety of concrete products.
Output until 1919 was generally below 0.5 million tonnes per year,
but increased road building and construction in the interwar period
caused it to be almost tripled by 1931. It then fluctuated over the next
twenty years but rose from 2 to 3 million tonnes in the 1950s to
a new peak of 12.6 million tonnes in 1973, largely on the basis
of 'exports' to south-east England. Following the late 1980s construction
boom, output rose to a peak of 18.8 million tonnes in 1990, but
with falling demand, fell back to a level generally between 11.0
and 14.0 million tonnes per year. Somerset ranks third after Derbyshire
and Leicestershire in terms of aggregates output. Since 1974, Somerset
production of crushed rock has averaged about 10% of the national
output.
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