St. Louis Meeting (e0a83807-5a60-46be-b139-3bb5072098e1)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 2
- File Size:
- 121 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 6, 1917
Abstract
Zinc is just now a very important metal. Its use in cartridges and shrapnel brass are in the public eye. But its uses after the war are no less important. Brass as an engineering material for electrical machin-ery, journal bearings, and plumbing fixtures takes fully 50 per cent. of the production, and its use in these lines would have been increased in the last few years but for the price. Its use for barbed wire is probably more in war time than in peace. In the composition of paints, it is becoming more and more necessary. One of the forms of pigment, litho- pone, is the base of nearly all interior wall paints; of all the sanitary enamels for bath-rooms and bath-tubs, and is now in great demand. Zinc oxide is also increasing in use for paint, and for manufacture of linoleum. When we realize that this district-Missouri, Oklahoma, Kansas and Arkansas-produces now over one-third of the zinc ore of the world, it is at once seen that a meeting where the geology, mining, concentration
Citation
APA: (1917) St. Louis Meeting (e0a83807-5a60-46be-b139-3bb5072098e1)
MLA: St. Louis Meeting (e0a83807-5a60-46be-b139-3bb5072098e1). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1917.