Agricola, Georgius, De re metallica, 1912/1950

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Stagnant air, both that which remains in a shaft and that which remains
in
a tunnel, produces a difficulty in breathing; the remedies for this evil
are
the ventilating machines which I have explained above.
There is another
illness
even more destructive, which soon brings death to men who work
in
those shafts or levels or tunnels in which the hard rock is broken by fire.
Here the air is infected with poison, since large and small veins and seams
in
the rocks exhale some subtle poison from the minerals, which is driven
out
by the fire, and this poison itself is raised with the smoke not unlike
pompholyx,23 which clings to the upper part of the walls in the works in which
ore
is smelted.
If this poison cannot escape from the ground, but falls down
into
the pools and floats on their surface, it often causes danger, for if at any
time
the water is disturbed through a stone or anything else, these fumes rise
again
from the pools and thus overcome the men, by being drawn in with their
breath
; this is even much worse if the fumes of the fire have not yet all
escaped
.
The bodies of living creatures who are infected with this poison
generally
swell immediately and lose all movement and feeling, and they die
without
pain; men even in the act of climbing from the shafts by the
steps
of ladders fall back into the shafts when the poison overtakes them,
because
their hands do not perform their office, and seem to them to be round
and
spherical, and likewise their feet.
If by good fortune the injured
ones
escape these evils, for a little while they are pale and look like
dead
men.
At such times, no one should descend into the mine or into the
neighbouring
mines, or if he is in them he should come out quickly.
Prudent
and
skilled miners burn the piles of wood on Friday, towards evening, and

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