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BOOK VIII.
UESTIONS of assaying were explained in the last
Book, and I have now come to a greater task, that
is, to the description of how we extract the metals.
First of all I will explain the method of preparing
the ore1 ; for since Nature usually creates metals
in an impure state, mixed with earth, stones, and
solidified juices, it is necessary to separate most of
these impurities from the ores as far as can be,
before they are smelted, and therefore I will now
describe the methods by which the ores are sorted, broken with hammers,
burnt, crushed with stamps, ground into powder, sifted, washed, roasted,
and calcined2.
*As would be expected, practically all the technical terms used by Agricola in this
chapter are adaptations. The Latin terms, canalis, area, locus, vasa, cribrum, and fossa,
have had to be pressed into service for many different devices, largely by extemporised
combinations. Where the devices described have become obsolete, we have adopted the
nomenclature of the old works on Cornish methods. The following examples may be of
interest :—
Simple buddle = Canalis simplex                 Short strake = Area curia
Divided buddle = Canalis tabellis distinctus Canvas strake = Area linieis extensis contecta
Ordinary strake = Canalis devexus                 Limp                 = Radius.
The strake (or streke) when applied to alluvial tin, would have been termed a " tye "
in some parts of Cornwall, and the " short strake " a " gounce." In the case of the stamp
mill, inasmuch as almost every mechanical part has its counterpart in a modern mill, we
have considered the reader will have less difficulty if the modern designations are used
instead of the old Cornish. The following are the essential terms in modern, old Cornish,
and Latin :—
Stamp         ..Stamper ..Pilum Cams              ..Caps          ..Dentés
Stamp-stem..Lifter            ..Pilum Tappets         ..Tongues . .Pili denies
Shoes           .. Stamp-heads.. Capita Screens           ..Crate         . .Laminae foraminum plenae
Mortar-box ..Box                ..Capsa Settling pit ..Catchers . .Lacus
Cam-shaft . .Barrell           . .Axis Jigging sieve . .Dilleugher . .Cribrum angustum
•Agricola uses four Latin verbs in connection with heat operations at temperatures
under the melting point : Calefacio, uro, torreo, and cremo. The first he always uses in the
sense of "to warm" or "to heat," but the last three he uses indiscriminately in much the
same way as the English verbs burn, roast, and calcine are used ; but in general he uses the
Latin verbs in the order given to indicate degrees of heat. We have used the English
verbs in their technical sense as indicated by the context.
It is very difficult to say when roasting began as a distinct and separate metallurgical step in sulphide ore treatment. The Greeks and Romans worked both lead and
copper sulphides (see note on p. 391, and note on p. 403), but neither in the remains of old
works nor in their literature is there anything from which satisfactory details of such a step
can be obtained. The Ancients, of course, understood lime-burning, and calcined several
salts to purify them or to render them more caustic. Practically the only specific mention is
by Pliny regarding lead ores (see p. 391). Even the statement of Theophilus (1050-1100, a.D.),
may refer simply to rendering ore more fragile, for he says (p. 305) in regard to copper ore :
" This stone dug up in abundance is placed upon a pile and burned (comburitur) after the
" manner of lime. Nor does it change colour, but loses its hardness and can be broken up,
" and afterward it is smelted." The Probierbüchlein casually mentions roasting prior to
assaying, and Biringuccio (in, 2) mentions incidentally that " dry and ill-disposed ores
" before everything must be roasted in an open oven so that the air can get in." He gives
no further information ; and therefore this account of Agricola's becomes practically the
first. Apparently roasting, as a preliminary to the treatment of copper sulphides, did not come
into use in England until some time later than Agricola, for in Col. Grant Francis' " Smelting
of Copper in the Swansea District " (London, 1881, p. 29), a report is set of the " Doeinges of
" Jochim Ganse "—an imported German—at the " Mynes by Keswicke in Cumberland,
" A.D., 1581," wherein the delinquencies of the then current practice are described : " Thei
" never coulde, nether yet can make (copper) under xxn. tymes passinge thro the fire, and
" ΧΧΠ. weekes doeing thereof ane sometyme more. But now the nature of these ix. hurtfull
" humors abovesaid being discovered and opened by Jochim's way of doeing, we can, by bis
" order of workeinge, so correct theim, that parte of theim beinge by nature hurtfull to the