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  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Solid Solutions

    By Walter Rosenhain

    In selecting solid solutions for the subject of this lecture I have been guided by several considerations. The bodies known under that somewhat paradoxical name play a most important part in all types

    Jan 1, 1923

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    Cleveland Paper - Some Experiments on Blast-Furnace Gases

    By Jasper Whiting

    It is well known that there is no better indication of the working of a blast-furnace than is ,given by analyses of its gases; yet although many indiviclual analyses have been made, there is, I think,

    Jan 1, 1892

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    Cleveland Paper - Some Pressing Needs of Our Iron and Steel Manufacture

    By A. L. Holley

    It has been customary at our opening sessions, for the presiding officer to address you on the general development of one or another of our several professions, or upon some important feature of Minin

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Stone-Coal in the Lead Blast-Furnace

    By James W. Neill

    Bituminous coal has for many years been used for the smelting of iron-ores in the blast-furnace. In some districts in Scotland it is used alone, in others it is used mixed with coke. The similar use o

    Jan 1, 1892

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The Action of Various Commercial Carbonizing-Material (with Discussion)

    By Robert R. Abbott

    The practice of carbonizing steel for the purpose of case-hardening has assumed great commercial importance within the past 10 years. Formerly, case-hardened steel was held in more or less contempt

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The Alluvial Tin-Deposits of Siak, Sumatra

    By Charles M. Rolker

    The main tin-producing regions of the world are known to be England, Australia and the Dutch East Indian possessions, chiefly Banca and Billiton. During recent years, the tin of the Malay Peninsula, e

    Jan 1, 1892

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The Concentration of Iron-Ores (with Discussion)

    By N. V. Hansell

    The preparation of low-grade iron-ores by concentration, whether or not followed by an agglomeration of the concentrate, has in the United States only recently been recognized as a metallurgical proce

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The Constitution and Melting-Points of a Series of Copper-Slags

    By Charles H. Fulton

    There are comparatively few accurate data on the melting-or the freezing-point temperature of metallurgical slags, or on related physical phenomena, such as fluidity near the melting-point, specific h

    Jan 1, 1913

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    Cleveland Paper - The Development of the Reverberatory Furnace for Smelting Copper-Ores

    By E. P. Mathewson

    The early development of the reverberatory furnace for smelting copper-ores was the work of the Welsh smelters, particularly those of Swansea. The first record of a reverberatory furnace is made by Ja

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The Effect of Alumina in Blast-Furnace Slags (with Discussion)

    By J. E. Johnson

    The subject of blast-furnace slag is one which has had much consideration, particularly from the scientific standpoint, and several years ago technical literature contained many learned discussions on

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The Effect of High Carbon on the Quality of Charcoal-Iron (with Discussion)

    By J. E. Johnson

    Charcoal-iron is quantitively so unimportant compared with coke-iron, that its qualitative importance for many industrial purposes is entirely unkriown to many coke-furnace-men, and to the great major

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The First Iron Blast-Furnaces in America

    By W. H. Adams

    Shortly after becoming one of the van-guard of mine-developers in the State of Virginia, during the year 1883, I called the attention of the Institute to certain deposits of pyrites, which have been l

    Jan 1, 1892

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    Cleveland Paper - The Mahoning Valley Coal Regions

    By Andrew Roy

    The Mahoning Valley coal region lies on the extreme northern outcrop of the Ohio coal-field, and all the mines, with one exception, are opened on the lower coal of the series, No. 1 of the Ohio Geolog

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The Manufacture of Coke. A Discussion

    Joseph E. Thropp, Jr., Indiana Harbor, Ind.:—To what do you attribute the fact that in some localities the by-product coke sells at a premium over the ordinary bee-hive coke for foundry use ? If the c

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The Mass Copper of Lake Superior Mines and the Method of Mining it

    By William P. Blake

    The occurrence of enormous masses of pure copper has given the mining district of Lake Superior worldwide reputation. The first masses brought from there excited great attention, and directed the noti

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The Methods of the United States Steel Corporation for the Commercial Sampling and Analysis of Pig-Iron

    By J. M. Camp

    In conforniity with the design of the oficials of the United States Steel Corporation for the standardization of the methods employed in the sampling and analysis of all materials encountered in their

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The Microstructure of Iron and Steel

    By William Campbell

    The structure of iron and steel, though the object of so much study and research for the past 25 years, is by no means thoroughly understood. In the first place, we have three or more distinct iron

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The Occurrence of Gold in the Eocene Deposits of Texas

    By E. T. Dumble

    For many years there have been occasional reports of the discovery of gold from a belt of the coast country of Texas which is underlain by deposits belonging to the lower Eocene. For the most part the

    Jan 1, 1913