Agricola, Georgius, De re metallica, 1912/1950

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1written in Book I. of my workDe Veteribus et Novís Metallís)16; or they
may
be exposed through the force of the wind, when it uproots and destroys
the
trees which have grown over the veins; or by the breaking away of the
rocks
; or by long-continued heavy rains tearing away the mountain; or by
an
earthquake; or by a lightning flash; or by a snowslide; or by the
violence
of the winds: “Of such a nature are the rocks hurled down from
the
mountains by the force of the winds aided by the ravages of time. Or
the
plough may uncover the veins, for Justin relates in his history that
nuggets
of gold had been turned up in Galicia by the plough; or this may
occur
through a fire in the forest, as Diodorus Siculus tells us happened in the
silver
mines in Spain; and that saying of Posidonius is appropriate enough:
The earth violently moved by the fires consuming the forest sends forth new
products
, namely, gold and silver.17. And indeed, Lucretius has ex­
plained
the same thing more fully in the following lines: “Copper and gold
and
iron were discovered, and at the same time weighty silver and the sub­
stance
of lead, when fire had burned up vast forests on the great hills, either
by
a discharge of heaven's lightning, or else because, when men were waging
war
with one another, forest fires had carried fire among the enemy in order to
strike
terror to them, or because, attracted by the goodness of the soil, they
wished
to clear rich fields and bring the country into pasture, or else to destroy
wild
beasts and enrich themselves with the game; for hunting with pitfalls
and
with fire came into use before the practice of enclosing the wood with
toils
and rousing the game with dogs.
Whatever the fact is, from

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