Agricola, Georgius, De re metallica, 1912/1950

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1instance, the prosperous silver mines in Spain which belonged to Carthage5;
sometimes they were the property of great and illustrious families, as were
the Athenian mines in Mount Laurion6.
When a man owns mines but is ignorant of the art of mining, then
it is advisable that he should share in common with others the expenses,
not of one only, but of several mines.
When one man alone meets the
expense for a long time of a whole mine, if good fortune bestows on him a
vein abundant in metals, or in other products, he becomes very wealthy; if,
on the contrary, the mine is poor and barren, in time he will lose everything
which he has expended on it.
But the man who, in common with others,
has laid out his money on several mines in a region renowned for its wealth
of metals, rarely spends it in vain, for fortune usually responds to his
hopes in part.
For when out of twelve veins in which he has a joint interest

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