
This publication presents a new functional hypothesis for the Voynich Manuscript’s Rosettes foldout (f86v). Instead of interpreting the drawing as cosmological or symbolic, the paper argues that the diagram represents a technical schematic of an early modern deep-mining operation. Through visual and structural analysis, the nine circular compartments are identified as components of Renaissance mining engineering: excavation, drainage, ventilation, water-powered machinery, mechanical transmission, and ore processing. The model explains the internal logic of water, air, and energy flows and aligns closely with historical sources such as Georgius Agricola’s De Re Metallica. The study proposes that f86v is a coherent industrial process map rather than a metaphysical illustration. This upload is part of a living research series exploring the Voynich Manuscript as technical and industrial documentation. Each new version expands the project with additional sections and revised models while preserving earlier releases. The focus of the work is iconographic and structural analysis only; no linguistic decipherment of the Voynich script is claimed. This work is part of a research series interpreting the Voynich Manuscript as industrial documentation. Part I analyses three marginal figures as mining ideograms: prospecting with a divining rod, underground angle measurement, and fire-setting rock fracture with acidic quenching. Together they represent operational stages of mining practice encoded as technical shorthand rather than botanical or linguistic symbols. This release consolidates the modular operator framework of the Voynich Manuscript, introducing a formal token dictionary and a case study of folio f1r as a system initialization protocol.
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