MacAdam
John MacAdam was born in Ayr
on September 21, 1756. In 1783. MacAdam started experimenting
with a new method of road construction. When he was appointed
surveyor to the Bristol Turnpike Trust in 1816 he remade the
roads under his control with crushed stone bound with gravel
on a firm base of large stones. A camber, making the road
slightly convex, ensured the rainwater rapidly drained off
the road and did not penetrate the foundations. This way of
building roads later became known as the Macadamized system.
As a result of his success,
MacAdam was made surveyor-general of metropolitan roads in
England. By the end of the 19th century, most of the main
roads in Europe were built in this way.
Modern road surfaces are still
largely dependent on MacAdam's discovery. Coal tar was first
used to bind the stones together, hot-laid tarred aggregate
or tar-sprayed chips providing an excellent road-metalling
for the surface. Oil-based asphalt from Trinidad and from
refineries was later used as a road surfacing, laid on reinforced
concrete, but still owes a lot to MacAdam as it is mixed with
granite or limestone chippings. This process became known
as Tarmacadam (a short form of which is used to refer to airplane
runways: "tarmac").
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