Soapstone
Soapstone or steatite is a metamorphic rock. It has a large amount of the mineral talc.
Steatite is softer than most stones. Because steatite feels like soap, people call it "soapstone". People have been making things out of soapstone for thousands of years.
Soapstone has been a major component of ceramics used as electrical component insulators for many years. It is easily formed or carved into shapes.
During the Harappan/Indus civilization (2500 BC–1750 BC) soapstone was used in the manufacture of seals. These people used to import steatite from Shaher-i-sokhta and the Kirthar hills.
Soapstone Media
Mythological figures carved in soapstone by Kayasark, Inuit carver, held in the Honolulu Academy of Arts
The 21st-century BC statue of Iddi-Ilum of Mari, Syria, is made of soapstone
The outer layers of the Christ the Redeemer sculpture in Rio de Janeiro are made of soapstone.
A 12th-century Byzantine relief of Saint George and the Dragon
Steatite scarab at the Walters Art Museum
Nidaros Cathedral in Trondheim, Norway, constructed mainly of soapstone