Salusbury, Thomas, Mathematical collections and translations (Tome I), 1667

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1
For ſuppoſing, on the contrary, that it were poſſible for one of
thoſe
Solids being placed in the Liquid to lie in part without the
Liquid
, that is above its Surface, (alwaies provided that the ſaid
Liquid
be ſetled and undiſturbed,) let us imagine any Plane pro­
duced
thorow the Center of the Earth, thorow the Liquid, and
thorow
that Solid Body: and let us imagine that the Section of the
Liquid
is the Superficies A B G D, and the Section of the Solid
Body
that is within it the Superſicies E Z H T, and let us ſuppoſe
the
Center of the Earth to be the Point K: and let the part of the
ſaid
Solid ſubmerged in the Liquid be B G H T, and let that above
be
B E Z G: and let the Solid Body be ſuppoſed to be comprized in
a
Pyramid that hath its Parallelogram Baſe in the upper Surface of
the
Liquid, and its Summity or Vertex in the Center of the Earth:
which
Pyramid let us alſo ſuppoſe to be cut or divided by the ſame
Plane
in which is the Circumference A B G D, and let the Sections
230[Figure 230]
of
the Planes of the ſaid
Pyramid
be K L and
K
M: and in the Liquid
about
the Center K let
there
be deſcribed a Su­
perficies
of another
Sphære
below E Z H T,
which
let be X O P;
and
let this be cut by
the
Superficies of the Plane: And let there be another Pyramid ta­
ken
or ſuppoſed equal and like to that which compriſeth the ſaid
Solid
Body, and contiguous and conjunct with the ſame; and let
the
Sections of its Superficies be K M and K N: and let us ſuppoſe
another
Solid to be taken or imagined, of Liquor, contained in that
ſame
Pyramid, which let be R S C Y, equal and like to the partial
Solid
B H G T, which is immerged in the ſaid Liquid: But the
part
of the Liquid which in the firſt Pyramid is under the Super­
ficies
X O, and that, which in the other Pyramid is under the Su­
perficies
O P, are equijacent or equipoſited and contiguous, but
are
not preſſed equally; for that which is under the Superficies
X
O is preſſed by the Solid T H E Z, and by the Liquor that is
contained
between the two Spherical Superficies X O and L M
and
the Planes of the Pyramid, but that which proceeds accord­
ing
to F O is preſſed by the Solid R S C Y, and by the Liquid

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