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Book V about lodestone, hematite, geodes, hematite, selenite, lapis secularum, asbestos, mica
Page
of 251
Text size:
BOOK V
111
an equal quantity of rock salt is added to the sand and if there is no rock salt, marine salt can be used. When none of these salts is available either artificial salts or salts obtained from leaching the ashes of anthyllis and some even add the ashes of burnt trees. According to Pliny the first glass was made in India from crushed quartz. It can also be made from a genus of small pebbles very similar to gem stones that melt in a fire in the same fashion as the materials mentioned above.
At one time Sidon was famous for the glass produced there but within our times the finest glass is made in Murano and made famous by the Venetians who live in a city renowned for its beauty and spaciousness. The glass which is as colorless and transparent as quartz is the most highly esteemed. The clearest and finest glass is tinted in two ways. Sometimes a small or large amount of natural coloring material is ground with the glass and then both are melted together and it is only in this way that glass with the true color of gems is produced, for example, diamond,
srnaragdus, carbunculus,
amethyst,
hyacinthus,
sapphire, jet and others having a single color as well as some of the multicolored gems such as opal. By another method an apparently black glass is produced which, if held to the sun will show the true color that this glass will give to another glass when used as a dye. Silver is used to color glass white, black, green or part blue and part purple. In the same manner a famous variety of dyeing glass is made from gold and this is used to tint glass a clear ruby red. Black glass is called
obsidianus
because of
obsidanus lapis
which is also called jet. According to Pliny all red glass which is not transparent is called
haematinon.
The small jugs from which we drink malt liquors and the vessels from which we eat belong to this class. But this is enough conĀcerning this and the stones that melt in fire. I shall now take up the gems.
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Table Of Contents
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Agricola. Textbook of Mineralogy.
Front page, forword and index
To the illustrious duke of saxony and thuringia and misena prince of Maurice
Book I Minerals color, taste, odor , physical properties of gemstones and minerals such as emeralds, diamonds, rubies, sapphires
Book II About different applications of earths (painting, medical) and their occurrences
Book III about halite and nitrium, alum and acrid juices and related minerals, sulphur, bitumen, realgar, and orpiment; the fourth, chrysocolla, aerugo, caeruleum, ferrugo
Book IV Sulphur, amber, Pliny's gems, jet, bitumen, naphtha, camphor, maltha, Samothracian gem, thracius stone, obsidianus stone
Book V about lodestone, hematite, geodes, hematite, selenite, lapis secularum, asbestos, mica
Book VI gems: diamond, emeralds, sapphire, topaz, chrysoberyl, carbuncle, jaspis
Book VII marbles, gems in rings and other applications
Book VIII metals, precious such as gold, platinum, silver
Book IX artificially coloring of metals such as gold, silver, copper
Book X lapis sabinicus, lapis selentinus, lapis liparaeus and other mixtures of stone, metal and earth
Latin Mineral Index
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