img On the Magnet  /  Book I chapter 2 | 1.74%
Download App
Reading History

Book I chapter 2

Word Count: 1766    |    Released on: 18/11/2017

p.

what kind it is,

quoted from Nicander, the nails of whose shoes and the tip of whose staff stuck fast in a magnetick field while he pastured his flocks), or from the re

me the observin

etick region

and are sometimes of great size, as though broken off a great rock, and of considerable weight; sometimes single stones, as it were, and entire: some of these, though of only one pound weight, can lift on high four ounces of iron or a half-pound or even a whole pound. Red ones are found in Arabia, as broad as a tile, not equal in weight to those brought from China, but strong and good: they are a little darker in the island of Elba in the Tuscan sea, and together with these also grow white ones, like some in Spain in the mines of Caravaca: but these are of lesser power. Black ones also are found, of lower strength, such as those of the iron mines in Norway and in sea-coast places near the strait of Denmark. Amongst the blue-black or dusky blue also some are strong and highly commended. Other loadstones are of a leaden colour, fissile and not-fissile, capable of being split like slates in layers. I have also some like gray marble of an ashen colour, and some speckled like gray marble, and these take the finest polish. In Germany there are some perforated like honeycombs, lighter than any others, and yet strong. Those are metallick which smelt into the best iron; others are not easily smelted, but are burned up. There are loadstones that are very heavy, as also others very light; some are very powerful in catching up pieces of iron, while others are weaker and of less capacity, others so feeble and barren that they with difficulty attract ever so tiny a piece of iron and cannot repel an opposite magnetick. Others are firm and tough, and do not readily yield to the artificer. Others are friable. Again, there are some dense and hard as emery, or loose-textured and soft as pumice; porous or solid; entire and uniform, or varied and corroded; now like iron for hardness, yea, sometimes harder than iron to cut or to file; others are as soft as clay. Not all magnets can be properly called stones; some rather represent rocks; while others exist rather as metallick lodes; others as clods and lumps of earth. Thus varied and unlike each other, they are all endowed, some more, some less, with the peculiar virtue. For they vary according to the nature of the soil, the different admixture of clods and humours, having respect to the nature of the region and to their subsidence in this last-formed crust of the earth, resulting from the confluence of many causes, and the perpetual alternations of growth and decline, and the mutations of bodies. Nor is this stone of such potency rare; and there is no region wherein it is not to be found in some sort. But if men were to search for it more diligently and at greater outlay, or were able, where difficulties are present, to mine it, it would come to hand everywhere, as we shall hereafter prove. In many countries have been found and opened mines of efficacious loadstones unknown to the ancient writers, as for instance in Germany, where none of them has ever asserted that loadstones were mined. Yet since the time when, within the memory of our fathers, metallurgy began to flourish there, loadstones strong and efficacious in power have been dug out in numerous places; as in the Black Forest beyond Helceburg; in Mount Misena not far from Schwartzenberg50; a fa

img

Contents

Book I chapter 1 Book I chapter 2 Book I chapter 3 Book I chapter 4 Book I chapter 5 Book I chapter 6 Book I chapter 7 Book I chapter 8 Book I chapter 9 Book I chapter 10 Book I chapter 11
Book I chapter 12
Book I chapter 13
Book I chapter 14
Book I chapter 15
Book I chapter 16
Book I chapter 17
Book II chapter 1
Book II chapter 2
Book II chapter 3
Book II Chapter 4
Book II Chapter 5
Book II Chapter 6
Book II Chapter 7
Book II Chapter 8
Book II chapter 9
Book II chapter 10
Book II chapter 11
Book II chapter 12
Book II chapter 13
Book II Chapter 14
Book II chapter 15
Book II chapter 16
Book II chapter 17
Book II chapter 18
Book II chapter 19
Book II chapter 20
Book II chapter 21
Book II chapter 22
Book II chapter 23
Book II Chapter 24
Book II chapter 25
Book II Chapter 26
Book II Chapter 27
Book II Chapter 28
Book II chapter 29
Book II chapter 30
Book II chapter 31
Book II chapter 32
Book II Chapter 33
Book II Chapter 34
Book II chapter 35
Book II chapter 36
Book II Chapter 37
Book II chapter 38
Book II chapter 39
Book III chapter 1
Book III chapter 2
Book III chapter 3
Book III chapter 4
Book III chapter 5
Book III chapter 6
Book III chapter 7
Book III chapter 8
Book III chapter 9
Book III chapter 10
Book III chapter 11
Book III chapter 12
Book III chapter 13
Book III chapter 14
Book III chapter 15
Book III chapter 16
Book III chapter 17
Book Iv chapter 1
Book IV chapter 2
Book IV chapter 3
Book IV chapter 4
Book IV chapter 5
Book IV chapter 6
Book IV chapter 7
Book IV chapter 8
Book IV chapter 9
Book IV chapter 10
Book IV chapter 11
Book IV chapter 12
Book IV chapter 13
Book IV chapter 14
Book IV chapter 15
Book IV chapter 16
Book IV chapter 17
Book IV chapter 18
Book IV chapter 19
Book IV chapter 20
Book IV chapter 21
Book v chapter 1
Book V chapter 2
Book v chapter 3
Book v chapter 4
Book v chapter 5
Book v chapter 6
img
  /  2
img
Download App
icon APP STORE
icon GOOGLE PLAY