| Charles Frederick Partington - 1825 - 342 Seiten
...quantity that had been spread over its surface ; for it was the quantity which had been im-; bibed by the slate, the surface of which was equal to that...tile ; the tile was left to dry in a room heated to sixty degrees, and it did not lose all the water it had imbibed in less than six days. The finest sort... | |
| Joseph Gwilt - 1842 - 1114 Seiten
...be expected, the very same quantity that had been spread over its surface ; for it was the quantity which had been imbibed by the slate, the surface of which was equal to that of the ¿le. The tile was left to dry in a room heated to sixty degrees, and it did not lose all the water... | |
| James Smith (author of the Panorama of science and art.) - 1859 - 964 Seiten
...of slate. — Statement of the weight of different cOTerings. its surface ; for it was the quantity which had been imbibed by the slate, the surface of...tile. The tile was left to dry in a room heated to sixty degrees, and it did not loose all the water it had imbibed in less than six days If, then, tiles... | |
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