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Peter Moylan <peter@pmoylan.org> wrote:This can't be right. There is clay suitable for pottery in Fiji and many other Pacific islands where there have never been glaciers.
On 14/03/25 15:28, Ross Clark wrote:Guess they don't have any.>>
A little crossroads called Tirau (NZ) has a Big Dog (the tourist
information office) and a couple of Big Sheep (a souvenir shop), all
in corrugated iron. There's also a Shepherd, but he's not to scale,
and not in typical NZ costume. (He's in front of a church.)
>
https://www.dreamstime.com/photos-images/tirau-town.html
Nicely done.
>
When I visited Fiji I noticed that corrugated iron is a highly valued
construction material. I guess the native wood is unsuitable for
building, and maybe the clay is not the right sort for bricks.
You need glaciers for grinding rock to sand and clay.
They've got timber. Wood and leaves were traditional house-building materials, after all. Corrugated-iron houses are built on a timber frame.Importing timber and bricks would be hellishly expensive, I guess.
The bricks were already expensive by themselves.
Making them takes a lot of work, and a lot of firewood.
Nevertheless, the Dutch did export bricks.
The trick was to load the bricks as ballast,
and to take in rubble for the return voyage.
The rubble was used as landfill, for enlarging Amsterdam.
Anyway, the result is that when any building is demolished, theWhich get blown away with the next cyclone,
corrugated iron is grabbed and immediately reused. But there's not
enough of it, so the country is full of half-finished buildings.
creating new need,
Jan
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