Burdock piling (牛蒡積 gobouzumi ) is an advanced technique of Japanese wall building named after the resemblance of the stones used to the Japanese burdock plant.[1][2] It was used to build ishi gaki (石垣 stone wall ), sloped stone walls which make up the foundations of many Japanese castles, such as Osaka Castle.[3]
Large rocks are fitted together over a mound of earth, and the remaining cracks are filled in with pebbles. This stone fill is called kuri ishi (栗石 chestnut stones ) because of their small size. No mortar was used in the building of castle walls, which allowed the individual stones to move slightly during earthquakes without causing significant wall damage.
This technique grew from an earlier Japanese wall-building technique known as disordered piling.[2]
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The original article can be found at Burdock piling and the edit history here.