Agricola, Georgius, De re metallica, 1912/1950

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1
Since an inclined vein often lies near a vertical vein, it is advisable
to
sink a shaft at the spot where a stringer or cross-vein cuts them both;
or
where a vena dilatata or a stringer dilatata passes through, for minerals
are
usually found there.
In the same way we have a good prospect of finding
metal
at the point where an inclined vein joins a vertical one; this is why
miners
cross-cut the hangingwall or footwall of a main vein, and in these
openings
seek for a vein which may junction with the principal vein a few
fathoms
below.
Nay, further, these same miners, if no stringer or crossĀ­
vein
intersects the main vein so that they can follow it in their workings,
even
cross-cut through the solid rock of the hangingwall or footwall.
These
cross-cuts
are likewise called ā€œĪŗĻĻ…Ļ€Ļ„Ī±į½·,ā€ whether the beginning of the
opening
which has to be undertaken is made from a tunnel or from a drift.
Miners have some hope when only a cross vein cuts a main vein. Further,
if
a vein which cuts the main vein obliquely does not appear anywhere
beyond
it, it is advisable to dig into that side of the main vein toward which
the
oblique vein inclines, whether the right or left side, that we may ascerĀ­
tain
if the main vein has absorbed it; if after cross-cutting six fathoms it
is
not found, it is advisable to dig on the other side of the main vein, that
we
may know for certain whether it has carried it forward.
The owners
of
a main vein can often dig no less profitably on that side where the vein
which
cuts the main vein again appears, than where it first cuts it; the
owners
of the intersecting vein, when that is found again, recover their title,
which
had in a measure been lost.

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