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Albany Paper - Operations of the Hudson River Water-Power Company
By Charles E. Parsons
One of the greatest factors in our industrial development is cheap and convenient power. Long-distance electrical transmission has now reached such a stage that it is feasible, and practicable, to uti
Jan 1, 1904
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New York Paper - The Cyanide-Plant and Practice at the Ymir Mine, West Kootenay, British Columbia
By Edwin C. Holden
In making the original estimates for a report recommending the cyanidation of Ymir stamp-mill tailings, the writer was unable to find in any of the standard works on cyanide-practice certain data appl
Jan 1, 1904
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Albany Paper - Flue-Dirt and Top-Pressure in Iron Blast-Furnaces: A Study of the Influences Controlling Them (Discussion, p. 922)
By F. Louis Grammer
The following study of flue-dirt and the influences controlling it may be interesting to many. It is published because it represents observations at about thirty furnaces at different times. It may as
Jan 1, 1904
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Albany Paper - Electrical Power-Transmission for Mines
By Francis O. Blackwell
There are few industries in which power is more important to successful operation than mining, and none in which it is so difficult to ohtain power cheaply. Fuel is usually expeusive in mining dist
Jan 1, 1904
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Albany Paper - Origin of Pebble-Covered Plains in Desert Regions
By William P. Blake
The attention of travellers, upon the desert bordering the Great Colorado of the West, is often arrested by broad stretches of pebble-covered plains, or mesas, glittering in the sunlight from the myri
Jan 1, 1904
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Albany Paper - Water-Hoisting in the Pennsylvania Anthracite Region (Discussion, p. 923)
By R. V. Norris
The removal of mine-water by hoisting in tanks instead of pumping, while somewhat a reversion to the methods of the ancients, has come very rapidly into favor in the anthracite region of Pennsylvania
Jan 1, 1904
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New York Paper - An Example of the Alteration of Fire-Brick by Furnace Gases
By Frank Firmstone
The furnace from which the brick here referred to were taken, was lined under my supervision and blown-in in May, 1902. It was 75 ft. high and 18 ft. in greatest diameter, and used coke to smelt a lea
Jan 1, 1904
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Discussions - Of Mr. Jennings Paper on the Copper-Deposits of the Kaibab Plateau (see p. 839)
Horace F. Lunt, York, Montana* :—Two years ago I visited the region described by Mr. Jennings and assisted in the examination of a somewhat similar group of deposits in the White Mesa sandstone on the
Jan 1, 1904
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New York Paper - Some Practical Suggestions Concerning the Genesis of Ore-Deposits
By Max Boehmer
The first and most lasting impression made upon the mind of him who examines a mine or a mining district consists in the observation that in each and every case there is an intimate association of the
Jan 1, 1904
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Rules (1bd0b591-b224-4483-a169-326f21444e90)
Jan 1, 1904
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Albany Paper - Note on the Influence of the Rate of Cooling on the Structure of Steel
By H. C. Boynton, Albert Sauveur
In the course of some experiments conducted in the Metallographical Laboratory of Harvard University, some interesting facts were brought to light which appear to be worth recording in advance of a mo
Jan 1, 1904
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New York Paper - Relative Elimination of Impurities in Bessemerizing Copper-Matte (Discussion, p. 957)
By W. Randolph Van Lewis
In determilling the relative rate and in fi~lding the point where different inlpurities containecl in copper-matte are eliminated during the process of a converter-blow, the follo~ving results were ob
Jan 1, 1904
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New York Paper - Copper-Ore and Garnet in Association
By William P. Blake
The mineral, garnet, is a common associate of copper-ore in the southwestern portion of the United States. This association may be observed on a large scale in southwestern Arizona, in southern New Me
Jan 1, 1904
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Albany Paper - School Laboratory-Work : A Free-Milling Gold-Run
By Robert H. Richards, E. E. Bugbee
Friends often ask how accurate the work of our little stamp mill is, or express the opinion that a little mill cannot do good work. As a reply we would like to place on record the results of a few tes
Jan 1, 1904
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Officers (1de26545-0e32-40af-a141-54027998f081)
Jan 1, 1904
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New York Paper - The Copper-Deposits of the Kaibab Plateau, Arizona (Discussion, p. 989)
By E. P. Jennings
These unique copper-deposits occur on the top of the Kaibab Plateau, in Cocouino county, Arizona, and extend from the northern edge of the Grand Cañon of the Colorado river to near the Utah State line
Jan 1, 1904
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New York Paper - The Reduction of Lead from Litharge in Preliminary Assays, and the Advantages of an Oxide Slag
By E. H. Miller, E. J. Hall, M. J. Flak
It is well known that, with the exception of the so-called " niter-and-nails " method, all methods used for the fire-assay of salphide-ores,* especially those of iron, zinc, lead and copper, are very
Jan 1, 1904
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Index (ca469238-d983-4ee3-b78f-43be2a9a74e6)
Jan 1, 1904
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New York Paper - The Treadwell Group of Mines, Douglas Island, Alaska
By Robert A. Kinzie
PAGE Introduction.............334 Climate.............335 History............335 Geology.............341 Mining..............343 Shafts............343 Stations and Ore-Bins....345 Levels. Drifts
Jan 1, 1904
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New York Paper - Notes on the Coal- and Iron-Fields of Southeastern Shansi, China
By William H. Shockley
Though China has been widely explored by mining engineers during the past dozen years, comparatively little has been published concerning its mineral resources. The few moilographs scattered through t
Jan 1, 1904