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4. Farther Remarks on the Intermitting Brine Springs of Kissingen

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 March 2015

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Extract

On the 7th of January 1839, I communicated to the Royal Society of Edinburgh a pretty detailed account of the singular mineral and gas springs of Kissingen, in Bavaria, then much less known than at present to English travellers. I refer to this paper, printed in the Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal, April 1839, for the details of the most curious of these, a saline spring called Kunde-Brunnen, which was at that time regularly periodic; a copious and turbulent discharge of brine, mixed with torrents of carbonic acid gas, recurring six or eight times in the twenty-four hours. This phenomenon, exactly as described in my paper, appears to have continued with slight variation ever since, that is, for a period of twelve years, subject, however, to the variation formerly mentioned, that when the brine is actively withdrawn by pumps, for the manufacture of salt, the periods lengthen.

Type
Proceedings 1850-51
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1857

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