Castelli, Benedetto, Of the mensuration of running waters, 1661

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Sixthly, to me it ſeemeth a great weakneſſe to ſay, that there
ſhould
paſſe under the Bridge Quattro-Capi, an hundred fifty one
ells
of water compreſſed; for that I do not underſtand that wa­
ter
is like Cotton or Wool, which matters may be preſt and trod,
as
it happeneth alſo to the air, which receiveth compreſſion in
ſuch
ſort, that after that in ſome certain place a quantity of air
ſhall
be reduced to its natural conſtitution; and having taken up
all
the ſaid place, yet nevertheleſſe compreſſing the firſt Air
with
force and violence, it is reduced into far leſs room, and will
admit
four or ſix times as much air, as before, as is experimen­
tally
^{*} ſeen in the Wind-Gun, invented in our dayes by M. Vin,

cenzo Vincenti of Vrbin, which property of the Air of admit­
ting
condenſation, is alſo ſeen in the portable Fountains of the
ſame
M. Vincenzo: which Fountains ſpirt the Water on high,
by
force of the Air compreſſed, which whilſt it ſeeks to reduce
its
ſelf to its natural conſtitution, in the dilation cauſeth that vi­
olence
.
But the water can never, for any thing I know, crowd,
or
preſs ſo, as that if before the compreſſion it held or poſſeſt a
place
, being in its natural conſtitution, I believe not, I ſay, that it
is
poſſible, by preſſing and crowding to make it poſſeſs leſs room,
for
if it were poſſible to compreſs the Water, and make it to oc­
cupy
a leſs place, it would thence follow, that two Veſſels of
qual
meaſure, but of unequal height, ſhould be of unequal capa­
city
, and that ſhould hold more water which was higher; alſo a
Cylinder
, or other Veſſel more high than broad, would containe
more
water erected, than being laid along; for that being erect­

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