About This Book
The author presents a compact survey of common salt covering its chemistry and physical properties, the historical origins of salt production, and a concentrated study of the Cheshire salt district. He traces ancient methods of boiling brine and the later adoption of rock-salt mining, and explains how mine collapse and freshwater inflow converted worked-out galleries into brine reservoirs. Detailed chapters describe evolving brine extraction and evaporation technologies, modern salt-making plants, and illustrated examples of apparatus. He also documents the social and commercial dimensions of the trade, including monopolistic practices, price struggles, and the economics of storage and market distribution, together with the local environmental consequences such as subsidence.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
Bacon and Shakespeare
by Albert Frederick Calvert
Catalonia & the Balearic Islands: an historical and desciptive account
by Albert Frederick Calvert
Cordova: A city of the Moors
by Albert Frederick Calvert
Goya, an account of his life and works
by Albert Frederick Calvert
Granada and the Alhambra / A brief description of the ancient city of Granada, with a particular account of the Moorish palace
by Albert Frederick Calvert
Impressions of Spain
by Albert Frederick Calvert
You May Also Like
Syntymä, lapsuus ja kuolema: Vienan Karjalan tapoja ja uskomuksia
by Samuli Paulaharju
A Complete Account of the Settlement at Port Jackson
by Watkin Tench
True Tales of Arctic Heroism in the New World
by A. W. Greely
Descripcion é historia del castillo de la aljafería / sito extramuros de la ciudad de Zaragoza
by Mariano Nougués Secall
Worcestershire in the Nineteenth Century / A Complete Digest of Facts Occuring in the County since the Commencement of the year 1800
by T. C. Turberville
The Indolence of the Filipino
by José Rizal