The
pebbles, also called
cobbles, which can be used as
gravel, as
ballast or as
cobblestones, are mainly milky-white quartzite but can vary in colour and composition, including some that are hard, reddish-coloured sandstone. The sandstone in which these pebbles are deposited can be used for building or as an aggregate for
cement or
concrete. The sandstone can be hard enough for building, yet easy enough to "work", resulting in
bridges,
castles,
cathedrals and
churches constructed of reddish sandstone, throughout the relevant areas of Europe (e.g. Germany, Luxembourg, Switzerland,
Alsace in France, Denmark, Poland). A notable example is
Heidelberg in the German
state of
Baden-Württemberg, whose old town, including the
Old Bridge and the
castle, is built mostly from the local Odenwald sandstone. Within the parkland surrounding the castle ramparts, there is also a publicly accessible
outcrop mentioned in many local nature guides, where the succession from greyish
granite to reddish buntsandstein is marked clearly by an eroded gap. The architecture of the surrounding former
Palatinate territory, as well as the neighbouring
Rhenish Hesse,
modern Palatinate,
Odenwald and
Alsace areas traditionally make use of the building material for representative and public buildings, among them the historically important
Straßburger Münster, and the
Imperial Cathedrals of
Speyer,
Mainz, and
Worms, as well as many burgeois residences, manors and medieval castles like
Trifels and the
Château du Haut-Kœenigsburg. ==Location==