148 BOOK V. 



division of the compass — that is at a right angle. Then that part 

 of the lowest cord which lies beyond the part to which the cross-cord 

 runs being removed, it shows at what point the boundary mark should 

 be cut into the rock- of the tunnel or drift. The cutting is made in the 

 presence of the two Jurors and the manager and the foreman of each 

 mine. For as the Bergmeister in the presence of these same persons sets 

 the boundary stones on the surface, so the surveyor cuts in the rock a sign 

 which for this reason is called the boundary rock. If he fixes the boundary 

 mark of a meer in which a shaft has recently begun to be sunk on a vein, 

 first of all he measures and notes the incline of that shaft by the com- 

 pass or by another way with the apphed cords ; then he measures all 

 the drifts up to that one in whose rock the boundary mark has to 

 be cut. Of these drifts he measures each angle ; then the cords, being 

 laid out on the surveyor's field, in a similar way he stretches a cross- 

 cord, as I said, and cuts the sign on the rock. But if the underground 

 boundary rock has to be cut in a drift which Ues beneath the first drift, the 

 surveyor starts from the mark in the first drift, notes the different angles, 

 one by one, takes his measurements, and in the lower drift stretches a cord 

 beyond that place where he judges the mark ought to be cut ; and then, 

 as I said before, lays out the cords on the surveyor's field. Even if a vein 

 runs differently in the lower drift from the upper one, in which the first 

 boundary mark has been cut in the rock, still, in the lower drift the mark 

 must be cut in the rock vertically beneath. For if he cuts the lower mark 

 obUquely from the upper one some part of the possession of one mine is 

 taken away to its detriment, and given to the other. Moreover, if it 

 happens that the underground boundary mark requires to be cut in an 

 angle, the surveyor, starting from that angle, measures one fathom toward 

 the front of the mine and another fathom toward the back, and from these 

 measurements forms a triangle, and dividing its middle by a cross-cord, 

 makes his cutting for the boundary mark. 



Lastly, the surveyor sometimes, in order to make more certain, finds the 

 boundary of the meers in those places where many old boundary marks 

 are cut in the rock. Then, starting from a stake fixed on the surface, 

 he first of all measures to the nearest mine ; then he measures one shaft 

 after another ; then he fixes a stake on the surveyors' field, and making 

 a beginning from it stretches the same cords in the same way and measures 

 them, and again fixes in the ground a stake which for him will signify the end 

 of his measuring. Afterward he again measures underground from that 

 spot at which he left off, as many shafts and drifts as he can remember. Then 

 he returns to the surveyor's field, and starting again from the second stake, 

 makes his measurements ; and he does this as far as the drift in which the 

 boundary mark must be cut in the rock. Finally, commencing from the 

 stake first fixed in the ground, he stretches a cross-cord in a straight line to 

 the last stake, and this shows the length of the lowest drift. The point 

 where they touch, he judges to be the place where the underground boundary 



mark should be cut. 



END OF BOOK V. 



