Last Updated on Tuesday, 14 April 2009 05:35 Tuesday, 14 April 2009 05:32
(HealthNewsDigest.com) - As millions of Americans embark on the summer travel season, they will see—and traverse—one of the most enduring signs of civilization: roads. For roadways are the very arteries that link villages, cities, farms, factories, and all the other sundry markings of modern life. But the actual material responsible for this network is the true source of our collective experience on nearly every highway, freeway, turnpike, and street that covers the United States. And that is asphalt. (Michael D. Shaw, Contributing Columnist - HealthNewsDigest.com)"In the very midst of the city, the ground was covered by some dark stuff that silenced all the wheels and muffled the sound of hoofs. It was like tar, but Papa was sure it was not tar, and it was something like rubber, but it could not be rubber because rubber cost too much. We saw ladies all in silks and carrying ruffled parasols, walking with their escorts across the street. Their heels dented the street, and while we watched, these dents slowly filled up and smoothed themselves out. It was as if that stuff were alive. It was like magic."This material—in incarnations variously referred to as hot mix asphalt, blacktop, tarmac, macadam, plant mix, asphalt concrete, or bituminous concrete —was originally taken from natural sources, but as these sources declined, most is now produced from petroleum.
"When I first started, state-of-the-art was a batch plant that was dirty, that you could usually see three miles away," notes Don Brock, chairman of Astec Industries, Chattanooga, Tennessee. "We've gradually progressed from there to cleaning them up with wet washers and baghouses to being invisible today. Today, we need to build a plant that you can't see, you can't hear, and you can't smell."What's more, with 70 million metric tons of the stuff being recycled each year, asphalt is America's most recycled resource.
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Accelerated construction method meets objective for zero maintenance and long life cycle