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GANITABĀRASANGRAHA,
CHAPTER VIII. CALOULATIONS REGARDING EXCAVATIONS. 1. I bow in religious devotion with my head (bent downwards) to Jina Vardhamana, whose foot-stool is honoured by the crowns worn by all the chief gods, who is omniscient, ever-enduring, unthinkable, and infinite in form, and is (further) like the young (rising) sun in relation to the lotus-lakes representing the good and worthy people that are his devotees.
2. I shall now give out the three) varieties of karmantika, aundraphala, and sūksmaphala (in relation to excavations), which varieties are all derived from those vorious kinds of geometrical figures, mentioned before, as results obtained by multiplying them by (quantities measuring) depth. This seventh subject of treatment is the subject of excavations.
A stanza regarding the conventional assumption (implied in this chapter) :
3. The quantity of earth required to fill an excavation measuring one ou bio hasta is 3,200 palas. From that (same oubio volume of excavation) 3,600 palas (of earth) may be taken out.
The rule for arriving at the oubical contents of excavations :
4. Ares multiplied by depth gives rise to the approximate measure of the cubical contents in a regular excavation. The gums of all the various top dimensions with the corresponding bottom dimensions are halved; and then (these halved quantities of the same denomination are all added, and their sum is) divided by the number of the said (halved quantities). Such is the process of arriving at the average equivalent value.
8. The term Andra in Aundraphala is rather strange Banokrit and in perhape related to the Hindi word sfing neaning deep.'
3. The idea in this stanza evidently is that one oubio hasta of compressed earth weighs 8,600 palas, whilo 3,200 palas of orth are sufficient to al loosely the pace of 1 cubio hasta.
4. The latter half of this stansa evidently gives the process by which we Day arrive at the dimensions of a ropular excavation fairly eqaivalent to say piron Irregular excavation.