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mountains are all layers of clay, deposited one above the other by the various floods of the rivers.-That the different size of the strata is caused by the difference in the floods that is to say, greater or lesser floods." 1

Alluding elsewhere to a contemporary landslip (that, according to Dr. Richter, which took place above Bellinzona in 1515), Da Vinci says that, in his own times, "a mountain fell seven miles across a valley and closed it up, and also made a lake. And thus most

STUDY OF FLOWERS.

(Windsor Library.)

mountain lakes have been made, as the Lago di Garda, the lakes of Como and Lugano, and the Lago Maggiore." 2

It is not impossible that Leonardo explored the Piedmontese slopes of the Alps, and especially the Marquisate of Saluzzo; but his favourite regions were those about the Lake of Como. Starting from Lecco, he used to make his way into the Brienza mountains. It has, however, been ascertained that his geographical information about these neighbourhoods is not always quite exact. Thus he asserts that the four chief rivers which irrigate Europe-the

Rhine, the Rhone, the Danube, and the Po-all have their origin at the foot of Monte Boso (Monte Rosa).3 Any modern schoolboy could demonstrate the absurdity of this assertion.

The low land behind the Atlas, the bed of the famous " mare internum," did not escape Leonardo's attention. "It is not denied that the Nile is constantly muddy in entering the Egyptian Sea, and that its turbidity is caused by soil that this river is continually bringing from the places it passes; which soil never returns in the sea which receives it, unless it throws it on its shores. Take, for instance,

[graphic]

1 Richter, vol. ii. p. 205-206.

2 Richter, no. 1092.-Nowadays it is generally admitted that the formation of mountains is due to inequalities in the contraction of the earth's crust as it cooled, modified also by the pressure of the seas and by the flattening at the poles. I owe these explanations to the courtesy and erudition of Prince Roland Bonaparte.

Uzielli, Leonardo da Vinci e le Alpi, p. 18.

the sandy desert beyond Mount Atlas, formerly covered with salt water."

Leonardo's geographical studies come properly under the head of geology, for his interest was entirely given to physical geography. Logically enough, the other branches of the science were profoundly indifferent to him, like

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everything else that

concerned history and politics.

Cartography must

have reached a high point in Italy if we may judge from the maps of Leonardo, especially by that of Tuscany, in which the natural features, oreographic and hydrographic, of that province, are laid down with astonishing accuracy. He shows us Arezzo isolated in its marshes, Siena perched on its height, between Arbia, Chienna and Ciecina 2; Chiusi dominates a lake, large as an in

STUDY OF A TREE.

(Windsor Library.)

land sea, which seems to communicate with Lake Trasimene. Like those of the principal towns, the names of rivers are written in small capitals followed by the letters FL. The names of minor towns are inserted in small letters.

A mistake has been made in associating Leonardo with the discovery of America. Following Ximenes, Grothe gravely alludes to a letter written by Leonardo in 1473, to Christopher Columbus, in which

1 Richter, vol. ii. p. 265.

2 Richter, pl. cxiii.

he discusses the possibility of reaching the East Indies by his, the explorer's, projected route!1

Even in the work of Uzielli we are told that we owe to Leonardo the oldest map extant bearing the name of America. On this subject M. Henri Harrisse, the learned Americanist, writes to me as follows: "Among the papers of Leonardo now in England have been found the sections of a rude and elementary globe. These sections bear the name of America, and their configurations point to about the year 1515. Starting from this discovery, Mr. Mayor contributed a paper to Archeologia in which he contended that Leonardo himself was the author of the sections, an opinion now entirely abandoned. In any case, there are at least eight older maps of America, that of Juan de la Cosa, the pilot of Columbus, dated 1500; that of Alberto Cantino, made in 1502; that of Nicolay da Canerio, made in 1503; two maps published by Kunstmann in 1504, &c., &c."

With all these more abstract studies, Leonardo mingled practical applications and inventions, often of the humblest kind: vehicles, locks for canals, reduction-compasses with movable centres, instruments and machines of many kinds for drawing wire, twisting ropes, &c.

Leonardo, unlike most of his successors, laid down principles at the same time as he contrived applications; occasionally he even had the felicity of seeing his contrivances practically at work. He thus united in his own person three individuals, the theorist, the mechanical inventor, and the engineer, who are almost invariably distinct as M. Berthelot has so well explained in his work on Denis Papin. His drawings are enough to show that he was no mere theorist, but that he set his own fingers to the work, making machines and testing their efficiency for himself.

At the beginning of the seventeenth century the people of Milan were still using a number of machines invented by Leonardo. They cut and polished rock crystal, marble, and iron with his contrivances; they minced meat for sausages, and called in hydraulic power to supplement their own, with machines he had invented.

1 Leonardo da Vinci als Ingenieur und Philosoph, p. 20.
2 Ricerche, 1st edition, vol. i. p. 15; vol. ii. p. 322-323.

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XV

A Map of the Tuscan Coast.

(WINDSOR LIBRARY.)

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