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Grave MarkersServing Many Cultural PurposesGrave Markers commonly come in two varieties, bronze and granite. The memorial industry today specializes in both. While granite grave markers are still probably the most popular style, bronze grave markers are quickly proving to be an equally popular choice. Bronzes grave markers, typically, include bronze plates with a special memorial design and letters that name the deceased as well as the dates of birth and death. These plates are then attached to a granite base and then installed in cemeteries as beautiful grave markers. Granite grave markers, meanwhile, are formed from one of the world's oldest and strongest natural materials, which has been shaped, polished and chiseled into a grave marker that will certainly last for ages
But, besides their emotional value, grave markers are also important for historians. Grave markers assure that lives can be documented decades, or even centuries, after death. The study construction of grave markers assures that the person being memorialized will be remembered long after the elements have destroyed paper records or technology has made electronic records obsolete. For many years, grave markers were large, up-right pieces of sculpted stone that contained written information about the people whose graves they marked. While these "up-right" grave markers still are used today, they now usually mark groups of graves (such as an entire family). Up-right grave markers are less common today than they once were because time has shown that they have a tendency to deteriorate and fall over as years pass. Grave markers that are installed at ground level, meanwhile, tend to weather the elements much longer. These smaller grave markers are now the most common type. These plaque-like pieces are displayed directly on the ground at the head of a grave. And the grave markers typically memorialize one individual or a couple.
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