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Philadelphia Paper - Discussion on Steel Rails. Virginia Meeting (88363a08-f302-4bb1-ad7f-d6803a5d4ea3)
By R. W. Raymond
to same extent, the assumptions tinderlying Dr. Ilu?ley's con alusions. These amrrmptions are: that 'the loss of metal per million tons of trafffc, depends, first upon the circrtnistances
Jan 1, 1881
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Philadelphia Paper - Relations of the Graphite Deposits of Chester County, Pa, to the Geology of the Rocks containing Them
By Persifor Frazer
Among the geological problems with wliicli the present PenufiyI vanirr Geological Survey has had to deal is the relative age of wries of atrata passing around and through the city of' Philadelphi
Jan 1, 1881
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Shocks on Railway Bridges
By John W. Cloud
THE delivery of blows upon roadway structures by the locomotive engine at high speed, although long recognized, has, perhaps, not been a generally understood in severity, relation to speed, and cause
Jan 1, 1881
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Philadelphia Paper - The Whitwell Firebrick Hot-blast Stove, and its hut Improvements
By F. W. Gordon
The Whitwell firebrick hot-blast stove, for furnace use, may be seen in its three main stages of development in the accompnying drawings. Fig. 1 is the stove of 1869, the year in which it was thorough
Jan 1, 1881
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Philadelphia Paper - Discussion on Steel Rails. Philadelphia Meeting (097b7286-6e20-4522-bc8f-5c0ea2f15911)
By William Metcalf
William Metcalf, Pittsburgh, Pa. : In rising to discuss Dr. Dadley's paper, I feel somewhat as I did at the Baltimore meeting —that a "crucible" man has no right to interfere in a "Bessenier" dis
Jan 1, 1881
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The Cause of Rustiness and of Some of the Losses in Working Gold
By T. Egleston
THERE has always been a-theory among those working placer mines that gold is both found " rusty," and becomes so under treatment, by which they mean, not that gold becomes coated with oxide of gold, b
Jan 1, 1881
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Philadelphia Annual Meeting - February, 1881
Jan 1, 1881
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Philadelphia Paper - A Fluxing Gas-producer for Making Heating Gas
By W. J. Taylor
IN making heating gas with anthracite coal for roasting ore during the past few years, I hare tried many forms of gas generators. So far, the most successful and satisfactory one has been what we call
Jan 1, 1881
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Philadelphia Paper - Auriferous Slate Deposits of the Southern Mining Region
By P. H. Mell
Can the auriferous slate deposits of the Southern mining region ever be successfully worked ? is a question that has been often asked me by persons seeking investments in Southern mines. As the subjec
Jan 1, 1881
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Philadelphia Paper - Memoranda on the Analysis of Statistics
By A. W. Hale
In a work published in 1838, De Morgan, the author of the article on " Probabilities," in the Encyclopedia Metropolltimn, says: " The method of least squares is not yet introduced intb the affairs of
Jan 1, 1881
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Tile Wearing Capacity of Steel Rails in Relation to Their Chemical Composition and Physical Properties
By Charles B. Dudley
THEO. N. ELY, Esq., Superintendent of Motive Power. DEAR SIR: It is now nearly three years since my first report to you on the subject of steel rails was written. That report, as you will rememb
Jan 1, 1881
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Philadelphia Paper - Discussion on Steel Rails. Virginia Meeting (972bcfca-3c79-4955-ab4d-8b2ff9832005)
By C. B. Dudley
In a work published in 1838, De Morgan, the author of the article on " Probabilities," in the Encyclopedia Metropolltimn, says: " The method of least squares is not yet introduced iutb the affairs of
Jan 1, 1881
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Lake Superior Paper - Effect of Sewage on Iron
By Charles O. Thompson
In 1867 the city of Worcester walled in the Mill Brook for its main sewer. This stream, one of the important affluents of the Blackstone River, flows through the city in a southwestenly course from
Jan 1, 1881
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Notes on the Assay Spitzlutte - From The Mining Laboratory of the Massachusetts Insti¬tute of Technology
By Robert U. Richards
THE spitzlutte, as described by Rittinger, is an instrument by which sand is sorted in a continual upward-flowing stream of water. Its usual form is that of a pointed box, placed with the point downwa
Jan 1, 1881
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Philadelphia Paper - Discussion on Steel Rails. Virginia Meeting
C. P. Sandberg, London, Eng. 1 think we should all be grateful to the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, and to their chemist, Dr. Dudley, for spending so much time and money in order to solve an importan
Jan 1, 1881
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Can the Magnetism of Iron and Steel be Used to Determine Their Physical Properties?
By William Metcalf
ONE of the first questions that naturally occurs to one who handles steel is," Why does steel harden ?" To answer this question the chemist and physicist have devoted much thought and experiment, and
Jan 1, 1881
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On Rail Patterns
By A. L. Holley
THERE are regularly manufactured in the eleven Bessemer steel rail mills of the United States, 119 patterns* of steel rails, of 27 different weights per yard. This list does not include patterns which
Jan 1, 1881
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Note Ox a Direct Process for Treating Fine Iron Ores
By W. E. C. Eustis
1st. THE fine iron ore is mixed with a sufficient proportion of fine coking coal, and is coked in any of the ordinary methods for making coke. The effect of this is to convert the iron oxide into spon
Jan 1, 1881
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A Flux for Rolling Swill Cinder And Siliciou Iron Ores in the Blast Furnace
By James P. Kimball
AMONG the curious results of the recent advance of prices in the iron trade of the United States, one of them at least is to be regarded as of great importance. I allude to the utilization of mill cin
Jan 1, 1881