The most interesting mine in the world
is that of Wieliczka in Poland. In it there are
some thirty miles of streets and alleys; there are
churches with pillars, shrines, and statues; there
are stairs, monuments, and restaurants; there is a
ballroom three hundred feet long and one hundred and
ninety feet high, with beautiful chandeliers, and
in it is a carven throne whereon the Emperor Franz
Joseph sat when he visited the mine. There are
lakes crossed by ferryboats. There is a railroad
station for the mule trains which bear the precious
mineral salt, for this is a salt mine, and shrines,
statues, churches, chandeliers everything are
all cut out of salt.
This mine has been worked for at least
eight hundred years and still has salt enough to supply
all Europe for ages. The mass of salt is believed
to be five hundred miles long, fifty miles wide, and
nearly a quarter of a mile thick. It is so pure
that it is sold just as it comes from the mine, either
in blocks or finely ground. This mine is a wonderful
place to visit, almost like an enchanted palace, for
as the torchlight strikes the crystals of salt, they
flash and sparkle as if the wall was covered with
rubies and diamonds.
There is nothing like an enchanted
palace in any salt mine of the United States, no statues
or chapels or chandeliers. There is only a hole
in the ground, where mining is carried on in much the
same manner as in other kinds of mines. The shaft
is sunk and lined with timbers to keep the dirt from
falling in, just as in other mines. In working
salt mines, however, water is almost as bad as earth,
and therefore a layer of clay is put between the timbers
and the earth. There are the usual galleries
and pillars, with roof and floor of salt. The
workmen try to get the salt out in lumps or blocks
as far as possible, and so they bore in drill holes
and then blast with dynamite or powder. The salt
is loaded upon little cars, running on tracks, and
is carried up the shaft and to the top of a breaker,
usually more than one hundred feet above the surface
of the ground. There it is dumped upon a screen
of iron bars, which lets the fine salt fall through.
The large lumps are sold without crushing or sifting,
and are used for cattle and sheep.
One of the great deposits of salt
is in southeastern California. It is thought
that the Gulf of California used to run much farther
north than it now does, and that the earth rose, shutting
away part of it from the ocean. This imprisoned
water was full of salt. In time it dried, and
the sand blew over it till it was far underground.
A better way than digging was found to work it, as
will be seen later; but while digging was going on,
the workmen built a cottage of blocks of salt, clear
and glassy. The little rain that falls there melted
the blocks only enough to unite them firmly together;
and there the house has stood for many years.
Countries that have no deposits of
rock salt can easily get plenty of salt from the water
of the ocean if they only have a seacoast. About
one thirtieth of the ocean water is salt, and if the
water is evaporated, the salt can be collected without
difficulty. France makes a great deal of salt
in this way. When a man goes into the manufacture,
or rather, the collecting of salt, he first of all
buys or rents a piece of land, perhaps
several acres of it, that lies just above
high water, and makes it as level as possible.
Unless it is very firm land, he covers it with clay,
so that the water will not soak through it. Then
he divides it into large square basins, making each
a little lower than the one before it. Close beside
the highest basin he makes a reservoir which at high
tide receives water from the ocean. This flows
slowly from the reservoir through one basin after
another, becoming more and more salt as the water evaporates.
At length the water is gone, and the salt remains.
The workmen take wooden scrapers and push the salt
toward the walls of the basins and then shovel it
up on the dikes and heap it into creamy cones that
sparkle in the sunshine. The dikes are narrow,
raised pathways beside the basins and between them.
As you walk along on top of them, you can smell a
faint violet perfume from the salt. Thatch is
put over the cones to protect them from the rain,
and there they stand till some of the impurities drain
away. This salt is not perfectly white, because
the workmen cannot help scraping up a little of the
gray or reddish clay with it. Most of it is sold
as it is, nevertheless, for many people have an absurd
notion that the darker it is the purer it is.
For those who wish to buy white salt it is sent to
a refinery to be washed with pure water, then boiled
down and dried.
So it is that the sun helps to manufacture
salt. In some of the colder countries, frost
does the same work, but in a very different manner.
When salt water freezes, the water freezes,
but the salt does not, and a piece of salt water ice
is almost as pure as that made of fresh water.
Of course, after part of the water in a basin of salt
water has been frozen out, what is left is more salt
than it was at first, and after the freezing has been
repeated several times, only a little water remains,
and evaporation will soon carry this away, leaving
only salt in the basin, waiting to be purified.
Not very many years ago one of the
encyclopaedias remarked that “the deposits of
salt in the United States are unimportant.”
This was true as far as the working of them was concerned,
but in 1913 the United States produced more than 34,000,000
barrels. Part of this was made by evaporation
of the waters of salt springs, and a small share from
Great Salt Lake in Utah. The early settlers in
Utah used to gather salt from the shallow bays or
lagoons where the water evaporated during the summer;
but now dams of earth hold back the water in a reservoir.
In the spring the pumps are put to work and the reservoir
is soon filled with water. This is left to stand
and give the impurities a chance to settle to the
bottom. Then it is allowed to flow into smaller
basins, while more water is pumped into the reservoir.
When autumn comes, the crop of salt is ready to be
harvested. It is in the form of a crust three
to six inches thick, some of it in large crystals,
and some fine-grained. This crust is broken by
ploughs, and the salt is heaped up into great cones
and left for the rain to wash clean. Then it
goes to the mill for purifying. The water of
Great Salt Lake is much more salty than that of the
ocean. It preserves timber remarkably well, and
often salt from the lake is put around telephone poles,
seventy-five pounds being dropped into the hole for
each one. It has been suggested to soak timber
in the Lake, and then paint it with creosote to keep
the wet out and the salt in.
Salt is also made from the waters
of salt springs, which the Indians thought were the
homes of evil spirits. At Salton, in California,
an area of more than one thousand acres, which lies
two hundred and sixty-four feet below sea level, is
flooded with water from salt springs. When this
water has evaporated, all these acres are covered
with salt ten to twenty inches thick, and as dazzlingly
white as if it was snow. This great field is
ploughed up with a massive four-wheeled implement
called a “salt-plough.” It is run
by steam and needs two men to manage it. The
heavy steel ploughshare breaks up the salt crust,
making broad, shallow furrows and throwing the salt
in ridges on both sides. The plough has hardly
moved on before the crust begins to form again.
This broken crust is worked in water by men with hoes
in order to remove the bits of earth that stick to
it, then piled up into cones to drain, loaded upon
flat trucks, and carried to the breaker. The
salt fields are wonderfully beautiful in the moonlight,
but not very agreeable to work in, for the mercury
often reaches 140 deg. F., and the air is
so full of particles of salt that the workers feel
an intense thirst, which the warm, brackish water
does not satisfy. The work is done by Indians
and Japanese, for white people cannot endure the heat.
A large portion of the salt used in
the United States comes directly from rock salt strata,
hundreds of feet below the surface of the ground.
These were perhaps the bed of the ocean ages and ages
ago. There is a great extent of the beds in New
York, Michigan, Ohio, Kansas, and other States.
In Michigan there is a stratum of rock salt thirty
to two hundred and fifty feet thick and some fifteen
hundred to two thousand feet below the surface.
To mine this would be a difficult and expensive undertaking,
and a far better way has been discovered. First,
a pipe is forced down through the surface dirt, the
limestone, and the shale to the salt stratum.
The drill works inside this pipe and bores a hole
for a six-inch pipe directly into the salt. A
three-inch pipe is let down inside of the six-inch
pipe, and water is forced down through the smaller
pipe. It dissolves the salt, becomes brine, and
rises through the space between the two pipes.
It is carried through troughs to some great tanks,
and from these it flows into “grain-settlers,”
then into the “grainers” proper, where
the grains of salt settle. At the bottom of the
grainers are steam pipes, and these make the brine
so hot that before long little crystals of salt are
seen floating on the surface of the water. Crystals
form much better if the water is perfectly smooth,
and to bring this about a very little oil is poured
into the grainer. It spreads over the surface
in the thinnest film that can be imagined. The
water evaporates, and the tiny crystals grow, one
joining to another as they do in rock candy.
When they become larger, they drop to the bottom of
the grainer. They are now swept along in a trough
to a “pocket,” carried up by an endless
chain of buckets, and then wheeled away to the packinghouse.
The finest salt is made by using vacuum
pans. These are great cans out of which the air
is pumped, and into which the brine flows. This
brine, heated by steam pipes, begins to boil, and as
the steam from it rises, it has to pass through a
pipe at the top and is thus carried into a small tank
into which cold water is flowing. The cold makes
the steam condense into water, which runs off.
The condensed water occupies less space than the steam
and so maintains the vacuum in the pan. For a
perfect vacuum the brine is boiled at less than 100
deg. F., while in an open pan or grainer
it requires 226 deg. to boil brine. The
brine is soon so rich in salt that tiny crystals begin
to form. These are taken out and dried.
If you look at some grains of table salt through a
magnifying glass, you can see that each grain is a
tiny cubical crystal. Sometimes two or three
are united, and often the corners are rounded off
and worn, but they show plainly that they are little
cubes.
Most of the salt used on our tables
is made by the vacuum process or by an improved method
which produces tiny flakes of salt similar to snowflakes.
The salt brine is heated to a high temperature and
filtered. In the filters the impurities are taken
out, and this process gives us very pure salt.
The tiny flakes dissolve more easily than the cubes
of salt, and thus flavor food more readily.
With a few savage tribes salt is regarded
as a great luxury, but with most peoples it is looked
upon as a necessity. Some of the early races
thought a salt spring was a special gift of the gods,
and in their sacrifices they always used salt.
In later times to sit “above the salt,”
between the great ornamental salt cellar and the master
of the house, was a mark of honor. Less distinguished
guests were seated “below the salt.”
To “eat a man’s salt” and then be
unfaithful to him has always been looked upon as a
shameful act; and with some of the savages, so long
as a stranger “ate his salt,” that
is, was a guest in the house of any one of them, he
was safe. To “eat salt together”
is an expression of friendliness. Cakes of salt
have been used as money in various parts of Africa
and Asia. “Attic salt” means wit,
because the Athenians, who lived in Attica, were famous
for their keen, delicate wit. To take a story
or a statement “with a grain of salt”
means not to accept it entirely, but only to believe
it partially. When Christ told his disciples
that they were “the salt of the earth,”
he meant that their lives and teaching would influence
others just as salt affects every article of food and
changes its flavor. Our word “salary”
comes from the Latin word sal, meaning salt;
and salarium, or “salt-money,” was
money given for paying one’s expenses on a journey.
Living without salt would be a difficult matter.
Cattle that have been shut away from it for a while
are almost wild to get it. Farmers living among
the mountains sometimes drive their cattle to a mountain
pasture to remain there through the summer, and every
little while they go up to salt the animals. The
cattle know the call and know that it means salt;
and I have seen them come rushing down the mountain-side
and through the woods, over fallen trees, through
briers, and down slippery rocks, bellowing as they
came, and plunging head first in a wild frenzy to get
to the pieces of rock salt that were waiting for them.