Agricola, Georgius, De re metallica, 1912/1950

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Next, as to venæ cumulatæ. These are dug by a somewhat different
method
, for when one of these shows some metal at the top of the ground,
first
of all one shaft is sunk; then, if it is worth while, around this one many
shafts
are sunk and tunnels are driven into the mountain.
If a torrent or
spring
has torn fragments of metal from such a vein, a tunnel is first driven
into
the mountain or hill for the purpose of searching for the ore; then
when
it is found, a vertical shaft is sunk in it.
Since the whole mountain, or
more
especially the whole hill, is undermined, seeing that the whole of it is
composed
of ore, it is necessary to leave the natural pillars and arches, or the
place
is timbered.
But sometimes when a vein is very hard it is broken by
fire
, whereby it happens that the soft pillars break up, or the timbers are
burnt
away, and the mountain by its great weight sinks into itself, and then
the
shaft buildings are swallowed up in the great subsidence.
Therefore,
about
a vena cumulata it is advisable to sink some shafts which are not sub­
ject
to this kind of ruin, through which the materials that are excavated may
be
carried out, not only while the pillars and underpinnings still remain whole
and
solid, but also after the supports have been destroyed by fire and have
fallen
.
Since ore which has thus fallen must necessarily be broken by fire,
new
shafts through which the smoke can escape must be sunk in the abyss.
At those places where stringers intersect, richer ore is generally obtained
from
the mine; these stringers, in the case of tin mines, sometimes have in
them
black stones the size of a walnut.
If such a vein is found in a plain,
as
not infrequently happens in the case of iron, many shafts are sunk, because
they
cannot be sunk very deep.
The work is carried on by this method
because
the miners cannot drive a tunnel into a level plain of this kind.

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