Agricola, Georgius, De re metallica, 1912/1950

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1The fourth wall is one hundred and fifty-one feet long. The height of each of
these walls, and likewise of the other two and of the transverse walls, of
which I will speak later on, is ten feet, and the thickness two feet and as
many palms.
The second long wall only is built fifteen feet high, because
of the furnaces which must be built against it.
The first long wall is distant
fifteen feet from the second, and the third is distant the same number of feet
from the fourth, but the second is distant thirty-nine feet from the third.
Then transverse walls are built, the first of which leads from the beginning
of the first long wall to the beginning of the second long wall; and the second
transverse wall from the beginning of the second long wall to the beginning of
the fourth long wall, for the third long wall does not reach so far.
Then from
the beginning of the third long wall are built two walls—the one to the
sixty-seventh foot of the second long wall, the other to the same point in
the fourth long wall.
The fifth transverse wall is built at a distance of ten
feet from the fourth transverse wall toward the second transverse wall;

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