Tank next to quarry driveway and a flat concrete pad, between pits.
![Image](http://i222.photobucket.com/albums/dd3/Nicotti/Ozora%20Quarry/March%202019/tank.jpg)
One of many piles.
![Image](http://i222.photobucket.com/albums/dd3/Nicotti/Ozora%20Quarry/March%202019/Southern%20Stone%20Pile%2001.jpg)
This was sitting rather high up on the sw side of the southern pit.
![Image](http://i222.photobucket.com/albums/dd3/Nicotti/Ozora%20Quarry/March%202019/Rando%20Machine.jpg)
![Image](http://i222.photobucket.com/albums/dd3/Nicotti/Ozora%20Quarry/March%202019/Rando%20Machine%202.jpg)
![Image](http://i222.photobucket.com/albums/dd3/Nicotti/Ozora%20Quarry/March%202019/tulips.jpg)
“Stone from the Ozora Marble Quarry has been used in the Department of Commerce Building and National Archives Building in Washington, DC, and many other buildings from Connecticut to Hawaii. In the National archives, the cases which hold the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights are Golden Vein Marble from the Ozora County.”
Cool.the_p0ssum wrote:There's a bunch of info on this quarry in the link below
Yeah, it did look surreal, especially the northern pit!Chris wrote:The way everything has been cut at an angle gives it an almost surreal appearance. I suppose that's so they have the "grain" going the right way in the slabs.
Nicotti wrote:
Me gusta el pile.Nicotti wrote:One of many piles.
I actually haven't the foggiest idea, but the way it's put together makes me think it's something like a crane hook block. Just a guess, I'm not a crane guy.Nicotti wrote:Headframe, what does this do? I assume it's part of the hoist system since it has pulleys on it.
Nicotti wrote: