Agricola, Georgius, De re metallica, 1912/1950

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1the likeness of many objects, as for instance tablets. These tablets and
cones are kept in the higher part of the third room of the house, or else on
the flat bench of the same height, in order that they may dry better in the
warm air.
In the manner I have described, a master and his helper continue
one after the other, alternately boiling the brine and moulding the salt,
day and night, with the exception only of the annual feast days.
No caldron
is able to stand the fire for more than half a year.
The master pours in water
and washes it out every week; when it is washed out he puts straw under
it and pounds it; new caldrons he washes three times in the first two
weeks, and afterward twice.
In this manner the incrustations fall from
the bottom; if they are not cleared off, the salt would have to be made
more slowly over a fiercer fire, which requires more brine and burns the
plates of the caldron.
If any cracks make their appearance in the caldron
they are filled up with cement.
The salt made during the first two weeks is
not so good, being usually stained by the rust at the bottom where incrusta­
tions have not yet adhered.
Although salt made in this manner is prepared only from the brine of
283[Figure 283]
A—POOL. B—POTS. C—LADLE. D—PANS. E—TONGS.

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