Agricola, Georgius, De re metallica, 1912/1950

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1
Elsewhere every meer, whether a head-meer or other meer, comprises
forty-two fathoms in width and as many in length.
In other places the Bergmeíster gives the owner or company all of some
locality defined by rivers or little valleys as boundaries.
But the boundaries
of every such area of whatsoever shape it be, descend vertically into the
earth; so the owner of that area has a right over that part of any vena
dilatata which lies beneath the first one, just as the owner of the meer on
a vena profunda has a right over so great a part of all other venae profundae
as lies within the boundaries of his meer; for just as wherever one vena
profunda is found, another is found not far away, so wherever one vena
dílatata is found, others are found beneath it.
Finally, the Bergmeíster divides vena cumulata areas in different ways,
for in some localities the head-meer is composed of three measures, doubled
in such a way that it is fourteen fathoms wide and twenty-one long; and
every other meer consists of two measures doubled, and is square, that is,
fourteen fathoms wide and as many long.
In some places the head-meer
is composed of three single measures, and its width is seven fathoms and
its length twenty-one, which two numbers multiplied together make one
hundred and forty-seven square fathoms.
50[Figure 50]
SHAPE OF A HEAD-MEER.
Each other meer consists of one double measure. In some places the
head-meer is given the shape of a double measure, and every other meer that
of a single measure.
Lastly, in other places the owner or a company is given
a right over some complete specified locality bounded by little streams,
valleys, or other limits.
Furthermore, all meers on venae cumulatae, as in
the case of dílatatae, descend vertically into the depths of the earth, and
each meer has the boundaries so determined as to prevent disputes arising
between the owners of neighbouring mines.
The boundary marks in use among miners formerly consisted only of
stones, and from this their name was derived, for now the marks of a
boundary are called “boundary stones.” To-day a row of posts, made either
of oak or pine, and strengthened at the top with iron rings to prevent them
from being damaged, is fixed beside the boundary stones to make them
more conspicuous.
By this method in former times the boundaries of the
fields were marked by stones or posts, not only as written of in the book “De
Limítíbus Agrorum,”7 but also as testified to by the songs of the poets. Such

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