Gold is found in our own part of the world; not to mention the gold extracted from the earth in India by the ants,[1] and in Scythia by the Griffins.[2] Among us it is procured in three different ways; the first of which is, in the shape of dust, found in running streams, the Tagus[3] in Spain, for instance, the Padus in Italy, the Hebrus in Thracia, the Pactolus in Asia, and the Ganges in India; indeed, there is no gold found in a more perfect state than this, thoroughly polished as it is by the continual attrition of the current.
A second mode of obtaining gold is by sinking shafts or seeking
it among the debris of mountains; both of which methods
it will be as well to describe. The persons in search of gold
in the first place remove the "segutilum,"[4] such being the
The gold that is extracted from shafts is known by some
persons as "canalicium," and by others as "canaliense;"[7] it
is found adhering to the gritty crust of marble,[8] and, altogether
different from the form in which it sparkles in the sapphirus[9]
of the East, and in the stone of Thebais[10] and other gems, it
is seen interlaced with the molecules of the marble. The
channels of these veins are found running in various directions
along the sides of the shafts, and hence the name of the gold
they yield—"canalicium."[11] In these shafts, too, the superincumbent
earth is kept from falling in by means of wooden
pillars. The substance that is extracted is first broken up,
and then washed; after which it is subjected to the action of
fire, and ground to a fine powder. This powder is known as
"apitascudes," while the silver which becomes disengaged in
the[12] furnace has the name of "sudor"[13] given to it. The im-
The third method of obtaining gold surpasses the labours
of the Giants[15] even: by the aid of galleries driven to a long
distance, mountains are excavated by the light of torches, the
duration of which forms the set times for work, the workmen
never seeing the light of day for many months together.
These mines are known as "arrugiæ;"[16] and not unfrequently
clefts are formed on a sudden, the earth sinks in, and the workmen
are crushed beneath; so that it would really appear less rash
to go in search of pearls and purples at the bottom of the sea,
so much more dangerous to ourselves have we made the earth
than the water! Hence it is, that in this kind of mining,
arches are left at frequent intervals for the purpose of supporting
the weight of the mountain above. In mining either
by shaft or by gallery, barriers of silex are met with, which
have to be driven asunder by the aid of fire and vinegar;[17] or
more frequently, as this method fills the galleries with suffocating
vapours and smoke, to be broken to pieces with bruising-
machines
shod with pieces of iron weighing one hundred and
fifty pounds: which done, the fragments are carried out on the
workmen's shoulders, night and day, each man passing them
on to his neighbour in the dark, it being only those at the pit's
mouth that ever see the light. In cases where the bed of silex
appears too thick to admit of being penetrated, the miner traces
along the sides of it, and so turns it. And yet, after all, the labour
entailed by this silex is looked upon as comparatively easy, there
being an earth—a kind of potter's clay mixed with gravel,
"gangadia" by name, which it is almost impossible to overcome.
This earth has to be attacked with iron wedges and hammers
When these operations are all completed, beginning at the last, they cut away[19] the wooden pillars at the point where they support the roof: the coming downfall gives warning, which is instantly perceived by the sentinel, and by him only, who is set to watch upon a peak of the same mountain. By voice as well as by signals, he orders the workmen to be immediately summoned from their labours, and at the same moment takes to flight himself. The mountain, rent to pieces, is cleft asunder, hurling its debris to a distance with a crash which it is impossible for the human imagination to conceive; and from the midst of a cloud of dust, of a density quite incredible, the victorious miners gaze upon this downfall of Nature. Nor yet even then are they sure of gold, nor indeed were they by any means certain that there was any to be found when they first began to excavate, it being quite sufficient, as an inducement to undergo such perils and to incur such vast expense, to entertain the hope that they shall obtain what they so eagerly desire.
Another labour, too, quite equal to this, and one which entails
even greater expense, is that of bringing rivers[20] from
the more elevated mountain heights, a distance in many instances
of one hundred miles perhaps, for the purpose of
washing these debris. The channels thus formed are called
"corrugi," from our word "corrivatio,"[21] I suppose; and even
when these are once made, they entail a thousand fresh labours.
The fall, for instance, must be steep, that the water may be
precipitated, so to say, rather than flow; and it is in this
manner that it is brought from the most elevated points.
Then, too, vallies and crevasses have to be united by the aid of
aqueducts, and in another place impassable rocks have to be
hewn away, and forced to make room for hollowed troughs of
wood; the person hewing them hanging suspended all the
time with ropes, so that to a spectator who views the operations
When they have reached the level ground, too, there is
still another labour that awaits them. Trenches—known as
"agogæ"[24]—have to be dug for the passage of the water; and
these, at regular intervals, have a layer of ulex placed at the
bottom. This ulex[25] is a plant like rosemary in appearance,
rough and prickly, and well-adapted for arresting any pieces
of gold that may be carried along. The sides, too, are closed
in with planks, and are supported by arches when carried over
steep and precipitous spots. The earth, carried onwards in
the stream, arrives at the sea at last, and thus is the shattered
mountain washed away; causes which have greatly tended to
extend the shores of Spain by these encroachments upon the
deep. It is also by the agency of canals of this description
that the material, excavated at the cost of such immense labour
by the process previously described,[26] is washed and car-
The gold found by excavating with galleries does not require to be melted, but is pure gold at once. In these excavations, too, it is found in lumps, as also in the shafts which are sunk, sometimes exceeding ten pounds even. The names given to these lumps are "palagæ," and "palacurnæ,"[27] while the gold found in small grains is known as "baluce." The ulex that is used for the above purpose is dried and burnt, after which the ashes of it are washed upon a bed of grassy turf, in order that the gold may be deposited thereupon.
Asturia, Gallæcia, and Lusitania furnish in this manner, yearly, according to some authorities, twenty thousand pounds' weight of gold, the produce of Asturia forming the major part. Indeed, there is no part of the world that for centuries has maintained such a continuous fertility in gold. I have already[28] mentioned that by an ancient decree of the senate, the soil of Italy has been protected from these researches; otherwise, there would be no land more fertile in metals. There is extant also a censorial law relative to the gold mines of Victumulæ, in the territory of Vercellæ,[29] by which the farmers of the revenue were forbidden to employ more than five thousand men at the works.
1.
2.
3.
4. segullo. He also
doubts the correctness of
Pliny's assertion as to the produce of the mines of Dalmatia.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14. tasco.
15.
16. arrugia, a term also used to
signify gold beneath the surface. According to Grimm, arruzi was the
ancient High German name for iron.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.