Agricola, Georgius, De re metallica, 1912/1950

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60[Figure 60]
A TRIANGLE HAVING A RIGHT ANGLE AND TWO EQUAL SIDES.
Therefore
, if a tunnel has been driven into the mountain for sixty fathoms,
there
remains a space of ground to be penetrated twenty-three fathoms and
two
feet long; for five feet of the second side of the major triangle, which
lies
above the mouth of the shaft and corresponds with the first side of the
minor
triangle, must not be added.
Therefore, if the shaft has been sunk
in
the middle of the head meer, a tunnel sixty fathoms long will reach
to
the boundary of the meer only when the tunnel has been extended a
further
two fathoms and two feet; but if the shaft is located in the middle of
an
ordinary meer, then the boundary will be reached when the tunnel has been
driven
a further length of nine fathoms and two feet.
Since a tunnel, for
every
one hundred fathoms of length, rises in grade one fathom, or at all
events
, ought to rise as it proceeds toward the shaft, one more fathom must
always
be taken from the depth allowed to the shaft, and one added to the
length
allowed to the tunnel.
Proportionately, because a tunnel fifty
fathoms
long is raised half a fathom, this amount must be taken from the
depth
of the shaft and added to the length of the tunnel.
In the same way
if
a tunnel is one hundred or fifty fathoms shorter or longer, the same proporĀ­
tion
also must be taken from the depth of the one and added to the length
of
the other.
For this reason, in the case mentioned above, half a fathom
and
a little more must be added to the distance to be driven through, so
that
there remain twenty-three fathoms, five feet, two palms, one and a half
digits
and a fifth of a digit; that is, if even the minutest proportions are
carried
out; and surveyors do not neglect these without good cause.
Similarly, if the shaft is seventy fathoms deep, in order that it may reach to
the
bottom of the tunnel, it still must be sunk a further depth of thirteen
fathoms
and two feet, or rather twelve fathoms and a half, one foot, two
digits
, and four-fifths of half a digit.
And in this instance five feet must be
deducted
from the reckoning, because these five feet complete the third side
of
the minor triangle, which is above the mouth of the shaft, and from its

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