Agricola, Georgius, De re metallica, 1912/1950

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    <archimedes>
      <text>
        <body>
          <chap>
            <pb pagenum="70"/>
            <figure number="37"/>
            <p type="caption">
              <s>A—THE “BEGINNING.” B—THE “END.” C—THE “HEAD.” D—THE “TAIL.”
                <lb/>
              E—TRANSVERSE VEIN.</s>
            </p>
            <p type="main">
              <s>A
                <emph type="italics"/>
              vena cumulata
                <emph.end type="italics"/>
              has a “beginning,” an “end,” a “head,” and a
                <lb/>
              “tail,” just as a
                <emph type="italics"/>
              vena profunda.
                <emph.end type="italics"/>
              </s>
              <s> Moreover, a
                <emph type="italics"/>
              vena cumulata,
                <emph.end type="italics"/>
              and likewise
                <lb/>
              a
                <emph type="italics"/>
              vena dilatata,
                <emph.end type="italics"/>
              are often cut through by a transverse
                <emph type="italics"/>
              vena profunda.
                <emph.end type="italics"/>
              </s>
            </p>
            <p type="main">
              <s>Stringers (
                <emph type="italics"/>
              fibrae
                <emph.end type="italics"/>
              )
                <emph type="sup"/>
              6
                <emph.end type="sup"/>
              , which are little veins, are classified into
                <emph type="italics"/>
              fibrae trans­
                <lb/>
              versae, fibrae obliquae
                <emph.end type="italics"/>
              which cut the vein obliquely,
                <emph type="italics"/>
              fibrae sociae,
                <lb/>
              fibrae dilatatae,
                <emph.end type="italics"/>
              and
                <emph type="italics"/>
              fibrae incumbentes.
                <emph.end type="italics"/>
              </s>
              <s> The
                <emph type="italics"/>
              fibra transversa
                <emph.end type="italics"/>
              crosses
                <lb/>
              the vein; the
                <emph type="italics"/>
              fibra obliqua
                <emph.end type="italics"/>
              crosses the vein obliquely; the
                <emph type="italics"/>
              fibra socia
                <emph.end type="italics"/>
              joins
                <lb/>
              with the vein itself; the
                <emph type="italics"/>
              fibra dilatata,
                <emph.end type="italics"/>
              like the
                <emph type="italics"/>
              vena dilatata,
                <emph.end type="italics"/>
              penetrates
                <lb/>
              through it; but the
                <emph type="italics"/>
              fibra dilatata,
                <emph.end type="italics"/>
              as well as the
                <emph type="italics"/>
              fibra profunda,
                <emph.end type="italics"/>
              is usually
                <lb/>
              found associated with a vein.</s>
            </p>
            <p type="main">
              <s>The
                <emph type="italics"/>
              fibra incumbens
                <emph.end type="italics"/>
              does not descend as deeply into the earth as the
                <lb/>
              other stringers, but lies on the vein, as it were, from the surface to the
                <lb/>
              hangingwall or footwall, from which it is named
                <emph type="italics"/>
              Subdialis.
                <emph.end type="italics"/>
                <emph type="sup"/>
              7
                <emph.end type="sup"/>
              </s>
            </p>
            <p type="main">
              <s>In truth, as to direction, junctions, and divisions, the stringers are not
                <lb/>
              different from the veins.
                <lb/>
              </s>
            </p>
          </chap>
        </body>
      </text>
    </archimedes>