C ^34) 
Sulphur. ; 
All Summer long fome Labourers dig up and down 
in leveral places of the fame Area, as if it was in a 
Kirchin-gardrn, and by thofe means they give way to 
the copious fulphureous Screams that are within the 
bowels of all this Mountain. Then out of the fuper- 
ficies of that Earth by the means of Earthen Pots they 
fublime the Brim.ftone. 
Sal ArmoniacHm Nativum' 
At the mouth of the largeft Splracula^ where is an 
exceffiveheat, and a continual noife and fmoak, is 
found a fort of a Native Sal Armoniac : It (eems the 
copious Steams come out informs Hquida, for if you 
put in a Key, a Sword, or any thing folid, thefe ef- 
flnvia will ftick immediately to it, and drop down like 
Water. All this Mountain ought to be extraordinary 
fall ot mineral (ubftances, for we fee thefe effluvia when 
Uiey are lublim'd to the top of the Spiracula do ftick 
there to Tiles or Stones, where they form this Salt, 
of which they gather yearly .about two hundred 
pounds weiglit It has much of the tafte of the faditi- 
tious S il Armoniac, and as a Learned Phyfician told 
me, being ftill'd in a Sand Furnace, it yields a Volatile 
Urinous Spiric abfolutely like Sal Armoniac, as to the 
fenfible qualities, and all other effeds : He only ob- 
fcrv'd that Spiric had fomething aluminous in it, and 
that tocorreft it they us'd to add a greater quantity 
of quick Lime, or Sal Tarcari, than in the common 
Spirit's diftillation. 
V; Part. 
