
Coquina:
Florida's Native Stone
This
native sedimentary rock was used in the construction of nearly every East
Florida plantation and sugar mill. Coquina is soft and easy to cut in
the ground, but it hardens when exposed to the open air, making the stone
suitable for building.
Coquina
rock is the product of sedimentary formations that underlie much of Florida's
Atlantic shore. Coquina is a mixture of shell fragments and quartz grains
held together by calcium carbonate that formed when higher sea levels
covered our present coast. Coquina means "tiny shell" in
Spanish. The name also was given to the small clam, Donaxvariabilis, whose
shells provided the natural aggregate for Coquina rock. Anastasia Island
was called "Cantera" - Spanish for quarry - in St. Augustine,
because it was a rich source of superior Coquina rock. Large-scale quarrying
began under Spanish rule in 1671 for the construction of the Castillo
de San Marcos in St. Augustine.
Coquina
has been used extensively in Florida for over four centuries. It was used
in many colonial buildings, most of which were built with slave labor
under the supervision of master masons. The historic coquina masonry work
of Florida is considered exceptional for the quality of its workmanship.

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