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21.
Cabana Club
PI-60 Building Stones of Downtown
Salt Lake City, A Walking Tour
41 East 400 South
The Cabana Club opened its doors on May 5, 1940, and is the second-oldest
private club still in Utah (after the Alta Club). The decorative
flagstones on its facade are Elba Quartzite and quartzite of Clarks
Basin, both found near the border of Idaho in the northern Grouse
Creek Mountains and the Raft River Range in Box Elder County, Utah.
The Elba Quartzite is a green, tan, or whitish stone with a dull
finish whereas the quartzite of Clarks Basin is tan, brown, and
cream-colored, usually with a shiny surface. These quartzites are
a flat, hard, and durable material which makes them desirable for
interior and exterior veneer and paving material.
Quarried periodically since the 1950s, these thin-bedded rocks
break into 1/2 to 2-inch thick plates that are pried out with hand
tools and then sorted by color, shape, and size and stacked on pallets
ready for shipping.
The original sandstone deposit that eventually became the Elba
Quartzite accumulated during the late Precambrian (2.5 billion to
570 million years ago). The quartzite of Clarks Basin was initially
beach sands of a sea that spread eastward across Utah during Early
Cambrian and early Middle Cambrian time (570 to 523 million years
ago).
Local metamorphism in the Raft River-Grouse Creek area during
the middle to late Mesozoic (205 to 66 million years ago) altered
the original sandstones. Color variation is due to different amounts
of iron staining and the amount and type of minerals present during
metamorphism.
Walk to the corner of 400 South and State Street and cross to
Washington Square on the southeast corner.
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