277
There was Like wi
se a Di
scourse about making salt water fresh by filtrati
on the /opinion/
effect of w
ch. was that noe filtration through sand earth or
the like would make salt water fresh.
S
r. Iohn Louther mentiond that at the nyches they saued the dreyning
of the salt and found that that would very much contribute to the
making of more salt by putting it to the brine that was to be
boyled, but on the other side tho
se w
ch. made salt out of seawater
vsually threw it away as supposing it hindred the producing salt
in the next boyling. M
r. Hooke obserued that the dreyning of
salt from sea water was vsually very bitter & Red, and was for the
mo
st part thrown away only some of it was v
sed for the washing
the sores of sheep & cattell as being a great dryer, and he further
conceiued that it was /made/ by a Di
ssolution
made of the iron Boyler
and therfore might be of an other nature. -
M
r. Pouey obserued that S
r. Robert Howard had acquainted him that
in his part of a salt work there was a subterraneous salt
Riuer.
m
r. Hooke shewd his Experiments which was the setting
a chaffing dish of coles into the Box and suffering it to stay
there till it went out & cea
sed to shine - then by a hole at
the top Letting Down into the air of the box a wax candle
the same would presently be
exp extingui
shed as if it were
Dippd into water. and that soe soon as euer the air came
to touch the flame of
the candle - But that air being changd
and fresh air admitted into the box the coles began to shine
a fre
sh & the candle let down into the box continued to -
burne & shine as in the open air. -
He also shewd his second experiment w
ch. was by putting
in
the a box ^ /filled w
th. lighted coles burning cleer/ when the air had been satiated as afore
said
by the coles which had been set into it. The which coles
Did presently cease to burn and looked as if they had been -
quite extinct - which very coles soe soon as euer the fresh
air was admitted presently began againe to shine & burne
as before.
The Exp
ts. for the next day were further to prosecute
this theory of m
r. Hooke that air was a men
struum that
Di
ssolued all sulphureous bodys by burning. and that w
thout air
noe such Di
ssolution would follow though the heat applyed were as great
Ref: CELL/RS/HF_279 © Centre for Editing Lives and Letters