![]() |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
It was a common source of grit additive for making mortar (the wet sloppy stuff, not the ordnance!) but I think that's largely a thing of the past now. Shell-grit mortar was common in early colonial construction in Australia, for example.
'Wicked-pedia' also state - "Shell grit is coarsely ground or broken seashells. It is used, among other things, by birds as a source of calcium for egg shell production, and to aid digestion. Other uses include protecting plants from slugs or snails[1] and in aquariums." Mike |
|
|