Catlinite, also called pipestone, is a type of argillite (Metamorphic rock mudstone), usually brownish-red in color, which occurs in a matrix of Sioux Quartzite. Because it is fine-grained and easily worked, it is prized by Native Americans, primarily those of the Plains Indians, for use in making , known as (). Pipestone quarries are located and preserved in Pipestone National Monument outside Pipestone, Minnesota, in Pipestone County, Minnesota, and at the Pipestone River in Ontario, Canada.
The red catlinite from the Pipestone, Minnesota, quarries is a soft claystone bed which occurs between layers of hard Sioux Quartzite. Geologic Formations, Pipestone National Monument, Minnesota, National Park Service Only hand tools are used to reach the catlinite, and only enrolled Native Americans are allowed to quarry for the stone at the Pipestone National Monument, to protect it from over-mining. Another quarry with harder stone is located near Hayward, Wisconsin, on the reservation, which the Ojibwe have used for centuries.
Utah pipestone has a more variable range of hard and soft forms, since it occurs as layers between deposits of harder . Utah pipestone is a by-product of slate mining in Delta, Utah, and several natural deposits have been mined and used for pipemaking by Native Americans in the area for millennia.
The Canadian quarry is no longer used, although there are quarries in Canada where another type of pipestone, black stone, is gleaned. The Ojibwe use both the red and black stone for their sacred pipes.
Catlinite is often used to make the hollow tubes in pipeclay triangles.
The Eastern Band Cherokee are social smokers, and use molded clay pipes for this purpose.
In the United Kingdom, since the 17th century "pipe-clay" has meant a pale, whitish clay. The Oxford English Dictionary defines it as "fine white kind of clay, which forms a ductile paste with water". It is traditionally used for all sorts of polishing and whitening purposes as well as for making and pottery.
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