Question:

Who made concrete and when?

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Who made concrete and when?

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  1. Concrete is a very old building product.  The oldest known surviving concrete is to be found in the former Yugoslavia and was thought to have been laid in 5,600 BC using red lime as the cement.

    The first major concrete users were the Egyptians in around 2,500 BC and the Romans from 300 BC The Romans found that by mixing a pink sand-like material which they obtained from Pozzuoli with their normal lime-based concretes they obtained a far stronger material. The pink sand turned out to be fine volcanic ash and they had inadvertently produced the first 'pozzolanic' cement. Pozzolana is any siliceous or siliceous and aluminous material which possesses little or no cementitious value in itself but will, if finely divided and mixed with water, chemically react with calcium hydroxide to form compounds with cementitious properties.


  2. I believe the Romans were the first to use volcano ash in their concrete 300BC-300AD in that range. They might not have been the first to use it, but were the first to use the volcano ash to make it stronger or to be used with water.

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