. . "1" . . "RIV/60461373:22310/09:00021505!RIV10-MSM-22310___" . "000266019400008" . "6" . "CZ - \u010Cesk\u00E1 republika" . "Pabst, Willi" . "Ko\u0159\u00E1nov\u00E1, Renata" . "Acta Geodynamica et Geomaterialia" . "22310" . "Clay mineralogy; Agricola; De natura fossilium; Theophrastus; Pliny; Isidore"@en . . "1214-9705" . . . . "Prehistory of clay mineralogy - from ancient times to Agricola" . "[9BA4E38C7D17]" . . . "S" . "2"^^ . "Prehistory of clay mineralogy - from ancient times to Agricola"@en . . "14"^^ . . "RIV/60461373:22310/09:00021505" . "The prehistory of clay mineralogy is highlighted form the beginnings in ancient Greece to the mineralogical works ofAgricola, in particular his famous handbook of mineralogy, entitle De natura fossilium (1546). Starting with a few scattered hints in the works of Archaic and Classic Greek authors, including Aristotle, the first tereatment of clays as a part of mineralogy is by Theophrastus. This basic tradition was further supplemented by Roman agricultural writes (Cato, Columella), Hellenistic authors (the geographer Strabo and the physicians SDioscorides and Galen) the Roman engineer-architect Vitruvius, and finally summarized in Pliny\u00B4s encyclopedia Naturalis historia, which has become the main soursce for later authors, including Agricola. It is shown to what extent Agricola\u00B4 s work is just a great summary of this traditional knowledge and to what extent Agricola\u00B4s work must be considered as original. Ing particular, Agricola\u00B4s attempt to a rational, combinatorical classification of %22earth" . "Prehistory of clay mineralogy - from ancient times to Agricola"@en . . "335592" . "1"^^ . . . "The prehistory of clay mineralogy is highlighted form the beginnings in ancient Greece to the mineralogical works ofAgricola, in particular his famous handbook of mineralogy, entitle De natura fossilium (1546). Starting with a few scattered hints in the works of Archaic and Classic Greek authors, including Aristotle, the first tereatment of clays as a part of mineralogy is by Theophrastus. This basic tradition was further supplemented by Roman agricultural writes (Cato, Columella), Hellenistic authors (the geographer Strabo and the physicians SDioscorides and Galen) the Roman engineer-architect Vitruvius, and finally summarized in Pliny\u00B4s encyclopedia Naturalis historia, which has become the main soursce for later authors, including Agricola. It is shown to what extent Agricola\u00B4 s work is just a great summary of this traditional knowledge and to what extent Agricola\u00B4s work must be considered as original. Ing particular, Agricola\u00B4s attempt to a rational, combinatorical classification of %22earth"@en . "Prehistory of clay mineralogy - from ancient times to Agricola" . . . .