WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Salt and the salt industry cover

Salt and the salt industry

Chapter 3: ILLUSTRATIONS
Open in WeRead

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.

ILLUSTRATIONS

PAGE
VIEW OF THE COMMERCIAL SALT COMPANY’S BRINE RESERVOIRS AT RODE HEATH, CHESHIRE Frontispiece
ANCIENT SALT WORKS 13
ANCIENT SALT WORKS 19
WIELIEZKA SALT MINES 21
SLANICU, RUMANIA, INTERIOR OF SALT MINE 25
WIELIEZKA SALT MINES 29
SUBSIDENCE OF LAND, NORTHWICH 41
DUNKIRK SUBSIDENCE, NORTHWICH 49
THE CANAL-BURST AND LANDSLIP NEAR NORTHWICH IN 1907 59
A SALT STORE-SHED 67
WITTON BROOK, SUBMERGENCE OF AGRICULTURAL LAND 75
WORKING IN DANGEROUS GROUND AFTER SUBSIDENCE, DUNKIRK LAKE, NORTHWICH 81
STREET-RAISING IN PROGRESS—HIGH STREET, NORTHWICH 89
THIS ROAD WAS RAISED TWENTY FEET IN TWENTY YEARS. NONE OF THESE BUILDINGS IS NOW STANDING—NORTHWICH 93
INTERIOR PENNY’S LANE MINE, NORTHWICH 99
REMARKABLE SUBSIDENCE IN NORTHWICH 111
A ROW OF OPEN PANS 119
ILLUSTRATION OF FOUR SCOTT PATENT DOUBLE EFFECT SALT EVAPORATORS, WITH AUTOMATIC SALT DISCHARGERS, SALT CONVEYORS, AND HYDRO-EXTRACTORS 131
THE HODGKINSON PATENT SALT-MAKING PLANT 137