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A29048 Three tracts written by Robert Boyle. Boyle, Robert, 1627-1691. 1671 (1671) Wing B4049; ESTC R26552 37,408 90

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ignorant and shall I fear long continue so For it is to be noted with which observation I shall conclude that what has been hitherto discoursed belongs only to the Temper of those Subterraneall parts to which men have been enabled to reach by Diging 'T is true indeed that some Mines especially in Germany and Hungary are of a Stupendious depth in comparison of the generality of ours and of the more obvious Cavities of the Earth yet I find it boasted in a Discourse written purposely of the Various Mines in the VVorld that the rich Mine at Sueberg is 400 yards deep And they are scarce believed that relate one Hungarian-Mine which they visited to be 400 sathom which though double the depth of the former reaches not to half a mile But the deepest of all the mines that I have as yet read or heard of from any credible Relator is that which the experienced Agricola in the Tract he calls Bermannus Cap. 12. mentions to be at Cotteberg But this it self though it reach to above 500 fathom that is 3000 foot yet this prodigious depth dos not much exceed halfe a mile fals short of three quarters Licet variae de ambitu tervae opiniones sint nobis tamen propemodum constet esse ipsam milliarum Italiarum 26255 quod in maximo ad Terrae superficiem circulo respondeant uni gradui milliaria proximè 73. c. Gassend Instit Astronom Lib 2. Cap. 13. and how small a part is that of the whole depth of the Terrestriall Globe whose semidiameter if we admit the recent account of the Learned Gassendus reckoned at 4177. Italian miles in comparison of which as I was saying how small a thing is a depth that falls very short of a single mile FINIS Of the TEMPERATURE Of the SUBMARINE REGIONS As to HEAT and COLD OF THE TEMPERATURE Of the SUBMARINE REGIONS As to Heat and Cold. CHAP. I. THough the Aristotelians who believe water and Aire to be reciprocally transmutable doe thereby fancy an Affinity between them that I am not yet convinced of yet I readily allow of so much Affinity betwixt those two fluid Bodies as invites me after having treated of the Temperature of the Aeriall Regions to say something of that of the Submarine Regions which name of Submarine though I know it may seem Improper I therefore Scruple not to make use of because even among the Generality of Learned Men use has Authorized the name of Subterraneous Places For as these are not by this name and indeed cannot in Reason be supposed to be beneath the whole Bodie of the Earth but only the Superficiall parts of it so by the Appellation of Submarine Regions 't is not to be supposed that the places so called are below the Bottom of the Sea but only below the surface of it But to come from words to things I presume it will not be expected that I that never pretended to be a Diver should give of the Regions I am to treat of an Account build on my own Observations and I hope it may gratifie a Reasonable Curiosity about a subject of which Classick Authors are so very silent and about which Philosophers seeme not so much as to have attempted any Experiments for want of Opportunities and mean to make them I offer the best Information I could supply my selfe what by purposely conversing with Persons that have dived some without and some by the help of Engins To which I have added some reports that I judge fit to be allowed made me by Persons that had conversed with the Divers upon those Affrican and Indian-Coasts where the most famous and expert are thought to be found And I the rather report the Answers and Relationsmy Inquiries procur'd because the Informations they give us concerne a subject considerable as well as vast about which neverthelesse I among many others am not in a condition to satissie at all my Curiosity by Tryalls of my own making and because also what I shall say will probably spoile the credit of the Vulgar Error that in all deepe water of which the Sea is the Cheifest the lowermost are still the warmest parts unlesse in case that in some very hot Climates or seasons the superficiall ones happen to be a little warm'd by the Extraordinary or Violent heat of the Sun CHAP. II THough the Air and the Earth have been discriminated as to Temperature into three Regions yet the Informations I have hitherto met with invite me not to assign to the Sea any more then two The former of which may be supposed to reach from the superficies of it as far downwards as the manifest operation of the variously reflected and refracted Beames of the Sun or other Causes of warmth penetrates from which to the Bottom of the Sea the other Region may be supposed to extend According to this Division the Limits of this upper Region will not be alwaies constant for in the Torrid Zone and other hotter Climates it will Caeteris paribus be greater then in the Frigid Zone or in the Temperate Zones and so it will be in Summer then in Winter and in hot weather then in Cold supposing in these Cases the Heat to come from the Sun and Air and not as sometimes it may do from the Subterraneall Exhalations The same causes are likewise proper as 't is manifest to alter the Temperature as well as the Bounds of this Region But this Temperature may also be changed in some few places by at least two other Causes The one is the differing constitution of the Soil that composes the Shore which may affect the neighbouring water if it doe extraordinarily abound with Nitre loosely contexed marchasites or other substances capable considerably to encrease or lessen the Coldnesse of the water Another though unfrequent Cause may be the figure and situation of the lesse deep parts of the Shore which may in some sort reverberate the Heat that proceeds from the Sun and upon such an account may either add to the warmth or allay the Coldnesse that would else be found in the neighbouring water For whatever the Schools are wont to teach about the Interest of the Attrition of Air in the heat produced by the Sun Beams I have elsewhere shown by Experiments that those Beams may considerably operate upon Bodies placed quite under water Besides these two Cases that may occasion Exceptions to the generall Observation I intimated by the words at least that there might be others Because to mention now but one Example though it seem probable from what I have elsewhere delivered concerning the Subterraneall Fires and Heats that may in some places be met with even beneath the bottom of the Sea that the Phaenomenon I am going to recite may be reduc'd to the causes newly intimated yet I am not absolutly certain but that in this case whereto some others may perhaps be found resebling some other cause then those hitherto mentioned may produce or concurre to the
colder then nearer the Top of the water that he could not well endure the coldnesse of it And when I farther asked him whether when he was let down to the bottom of the Sea in a great diving Bell as he told me he had been he felt it very cold though the water could not come immediately to touch him he replyed that when the bell came first to the ground he found the Air in it very cold though after he had staid a while there his breath and the steams of his Body made him very hot That also at a greater depth in those hotter Climates the Sea-water is sensibly Cold may be thus made probable Inquiring of a famous Sea-Commander who had been upon the Affrican Coast to what depth he was wont to sinck his Bottles to preserve his Wine any thing coole in that excessive hot Climate he Answered me that in the day time he kept it in a tolerable temper so as to be drinkable by keeping it in the Bottom of the ship and in sand but in the morning he had it coole enough by sincking his Bottles over night into the Sea and letting them hang all night at 20 or 30 fathom deepe under water Inquiring also of an intelligent Gentleman that was imploy'd to the river of Gambra sayl'd up 700 miles in it in a small frigot whether he had observed that in the Sea even of those hot climats wine may be preserved coole he told me that it might and that by the means I hinted to him which was to let down when the ship came to an Anchor in the Evening severall Bottles full of wine they used that of Madera exactly stoped to ten 12 or 14 fathoms deep whence being the next morning drawn up they found the wine coole and fresh as if the vessels had been in these parts drawne up out of a well provided it were presently drink for if that Circumstance were omitted the heat of the Aire on the upper part of the water would quickly warme the Liquor I remember too that having met with a man of Letters that sail'd to the East-Indies in a Portugal-Caraet I learnt by enquiry of him that 't was the practice in that great Vessell for the Captain and other Persons of note whilst they passe through the Torrid Zone to keep their Drink whether Wine or Water cool by letting it down in bottles to the depth of 80 90 anc sometimes an hundred Fathom or better and letting it stay there a competent time after which he told me he found it to be exceeding cool and refreshing Lastly to satisfie my selfe as far as I could to how great a depth the Coldness of the Sea reached meeting an observing Traveller whose affairs or Curiosity had carried him to divers parts both of the East and VVest-Indies I enquired of him whether he had taken notice of any extraordinary deep soundings in the vaster seas To which being answered that some years agoe sailing to the East Indies in a very great ship over a place on the other side the Line that was suspected to be very deep they had the Curiosity to let down 400 Fathom of Line and found they needed no lesse Whereupon I enquired of him whether he had taken notice of the Temperature of the sounding Lead assoon as 't was drawn up To which he told me that he and some others did and that the Lead which was of the weight of about 30 or 35 l had received so intense a degree of coldnesse as was very remarkable insomuch that he thought that if it had been a masse of Ice it could not have more vehemently refrigerated his hands and when I asked in what Climate this observation was made he told me 't was in the Antarctick Hemisphere but at a great distance from the Line As indeed I concluded by some Circumstances he mentioned to me that 't was about the 35th degree of Southern Latitude CHAP. 5. These are the cheife Relations I have hitherto been able to procure about the Temperature of the Sea which if they be so confirmed by others as that we may conclude they will generally hold it wil not be irrational to conceive that in reference to Temperature those two Fluids Air and Water may have this in common that where their Surfaces are contiguous and in the neighbouring parts they happen to be sometimes cold and sometimes hot as the particles they consist of chance to be more or lesse agitated by the variously reflected Sun-Beams or more or lesse affected by ●ther causes of Heat But that part of the Air which they call the second is superior to the first as also the lower Region of the Sea being more remote from the operation of those causes doe retain their naturall or more undisturbed Temperature which as to us men is a considerable degree of coldness the Agitation of their small parts being usually in those Regions much inferior to that of the Spirits Blood other parts of our Organs of Feeling So that the Regions of the water and Air seem to answer one another but in an inverted order of situation and the Analogie might perhaps be carryed further if I had time and opportunity to doe it in this place And here I shall not dissemble that I was somewhat perplexed by meeting with a traveller that had visited the East Indian Coast near the famous Cape of Comory for asking him some questions touching the neighbouring Sea I gathered from his discourse that he concluded from that of some Divers that the Sea near Ceylom was warmer at the bottom then at the top And when I thereupon asked him whether this happened not in their Winter he replyed that it was indeed Winter though not with us yet with them it occurr'd indeed to my thoughts on this occasion that perhaps in a part of the Torrid Zone so near the Line as about 80 degrees if the Sea were not of a considerable depth the heat of the two not far distant shores of Coromandell and Ceylom might have no small influence upon the Tempetature of the water I considered also which did not a little weigh with me that in divers parts of the East-Indies and even in a Region bordering upon Coromandell where an ingenious Acquaintance of mine lived some years it has been observed that Winter and Summer are not so much discriminated by Cold weather Hot as by very Rainy weather and very dry Nay in some places the sultry heat of the Climate is more complained of in what they call their Winter then their Summer So that there will be no necessity to recur to an Antiperistasis occasioned by the coldnes of the Winter I thought too that it may perhaps be without absurdity suspected that as the bottom of the Sea in this place had a peculiar Constitution that fitted it more then others for the copious production of pearls so there might be some peculiarity in the nature of the subjacent Soil or there may be