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== Materials == The earliest domes in the Middle East were built with mud-brick and, eventually, with baked brick and stone. Domes of wood allowed for wide spans due to the relatively light and flexible nature of the material and were the normal method for domed churches by the 7th century, although most domes were built with the other less flexible materials. Wooden domes were protected from the weather by roofing, such as copper or lead sheeting.{{sfn|Peterson|1996|p=68}} Domes of cut stone were more expensive and never as large, and timber was used for large spans where brick was unavailable.{{sfn|Mainstone|2001|p=121}} Roman concrete used an aggregate of stone with a powerful mortar. The aggregate transitioned over the centuries to pieces of fired clay, then to Roman bricks. By the sixth century, bricks with large amounts of mortar were the principle vaulting materials. [[Pozzolana]] appears to have only been used in central Italy.{{sfn|MacDonald|1958|pp=2β3, 7}} Brick domes were the favored choice for large-space monumental coverings until the [[Industrial Age]], due to their convenience and dependability.{{sfn|Kuban|1987|p=73}} [[Tie (engineering)|Ties]] and chains of iron or wood could be used to resist stresses.{{sfn|Giustina|2003|p=1037}} In the [[Middle East]] and [[Central Asia]], domes and drums constructed from mud brick and baked brick were sometimes covered with brittle [[ceramic]] tiles on the exterior to protect against rain and snow.{{sfn|Ashkan|Ahmad|2010|p=316}} The new building materials of the 19th century and a better understanding of the forces within structures from the 20th century opened up new possibilities. Iron and steel beams, steel cables, and pre-stressed concrete eliminated the need for external buttressing and enabled much thinner domes. Whereas earlier masonry domes may have had a radius to thickness ratio of 50, the ratio for modern domes can be in excess of 800. The lighter weight of these domes not only permitted far greater spans, but also allowed for the creation of large movable domes over modern sports stadiums.{{sfn|Denny|2010|p=139}} Experimental [[rammed earth]] domes were made as part of work on [[sustainable architecture]] at the [[University of Kassel]] in 1983.{{sfn|Minke|2012|pp=57β59, 127}}
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