Buffalo Paper - The Evolution of Mine-Surveying Instruments (See, as to Discussion, Secretary's note, p. 919)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Dunbar D. Scott
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
67
File Size:
3043 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1899

Abstract

The development in the perfection of mine-surveying instruments has been by no means rapid, as it has depended somewhat on the details of construction borrowed from astronomical and geodetic theodolites, largely on the restrictions laid down by mining companies and the prejudices of mine managers themselves, but more than all on the methods used in conducting surveys and the importance attached thereto. Mine-surveying, in some form or other, has been practiced from the very earliest times; but it has never kept pace with the other branches of surveying, or even with the art of mining itself, and cannot be recognized as an exact science until shortly before the beginning of this century. The works of Hero of Alexandria, who lived in the second century B.C., are still extant, and contain descriptions of a rectangular sighting-instrument, which he invented and called a diopter. His improvement upon this simple construction, which possibly he devised for use in the Greek mines for rough leveling-purposes and for laying out any angle, must be considered, says Hübner," as the origin of the highly perfected theodolite of to-day. Whether this instrument came into general use during the first centuries of the Christian era, is not recorded; in fact, no writer undertakes to tell how mine-surveying was conducted until 1556, in which year Agricola expounds the principles of mining and metallurgy in his De Re Metallica, devoting the entire fifth chapter to the practice of mine-surveying (see Fig. 1). In mediæval times those who possessed any knowledge of engineering skill made strenuous effort to keep their art a secret, partly on account of the miners' proverbial conservatism and partly for their own personal aggrandizement, and were, in
Citation

APA: Dunbar D. Scott  (1899)  Buffalo Paper - The Evolution of Mine-Surveying Instruments (See, as to Discussion, Secretary's note, p. 919)

MLA: Dunbar D. Scott Buffalo Paper - The Evolution of Mine-Surveying Instruments (See, as to Discussion, Secretary's note, p. 919). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1899.

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