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  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - A Review of the Iron-Mining Industry of New Jersey

    By John C. Smock

    The rich deposits of magnetic iron-ore in the Highlands of northern New Jersey attracted the attention of iron-workers at the time of the earliest settlements in that region. The outcrops of the oresh

    Jan 1, 1892

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - A Titaniferous Iron-Ore Deposit in Boulder County, Colo.

    By E. P. Jennings

    Large deposits of titaniferous iron-ore occur at Caribou, an old silver-mining camp in Boulder county, Colo., 17 miles west by south of Boulder, and a few miles northwest of the tungsten-mines. Profes

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - A Trip Through Northern Korea

    By Henry W. Turner

    The following notes were taken on a trip through northern Korea in the fall of 1910. We started with about 19 Korean ponies, and as many Koreans, from Shin Anju, on the railway from Seoul to Antung. W

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Aluminum in Steel Ingots

    By John W. Langley

    The papers of Mr. W. J. Keep, read before this Institute, have called attention to the influence of aluminum in cast-iron and on iron and steel castings. The information in these papers is interesting

    Jan 1, 1892

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - American Blast-Furnace Practice. [Discussion at Cleveland Meeting]

    [A discussion suggested by the paper of Mr. James Gsyley on " The Development of American Blast-Furnaces," read at the New York meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute, October, 1890, and reprinted fr

    Jan 1, 1892

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Bessemer Converter Bottoms

    By Robert Forsyth

    In working the Bessemer process, the bottom of the converter has always been a source of trouble and annoyance, and the subject of more experiments, probably, than any other part of the complex mechan

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Blast-Furnace Hearths and In-Walls

    By E. C. Pechin

    At the September meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute of Great Britain, Mr. Charles Wood, of the Tees Iron-works, read an interesting paper on "Further Improvements in Blast-Furnace Hearths," which

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Blowing-in a Blast-Furnace (with Discussion)

    By R. H. Sweetser

    There are probably as many variations of the method for blowing-in blast-furnaces as there are furnace superintendents. That some of these variations are poor practice is shown by the troublesome and

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Centrifual Machines for Ore-Grading and Ore-Concentrating (with Discussion)

    By Godfrey T. Vivian

    Very often important discoveries are made in one industry that may be used to advantage in another, but, owing to the rarity that men step out of one industry into another, these discoveries remain un

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Chemistry of the Reduction Processes in Use at Anaconda, Mont.

    By Frederick Laist

    The ores received at the Washoe Smelter come almost entirely from the mines in Butte and contain the following minerals : Chalcocite, Cu2S; covellite, CuS; chalcopyrite, CuFeS2, (trace); bornite, C

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Clinton Iron-Ore Deposits in Kentucky and Tennessee (see Discussion, P. 889)

    By S. Whinery

    I am indebted to L. E. Bryant, of Danville, Ky., President of the Virginia Mining Co., operating coal-mines in Scott county, Tenn., for the following information relating to the existence of the Clint

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Comparison of Results from Open-Topped and Closed-Topped Furnaces

    By Frank Firmstone

    In 1871, two furnaces at the Glendon Iron Works, which had been blown out on account of the "coal strike," were altered from the open-top plan with side flues for collecting the gas, to closed tops wi

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Comparisons of Blast-Furnace Results

    By Frank Firmstone

    It is proposed to consider here only comparisons made between results obtained when the materials employed are precisely the same, two furnaces at the same works for example, or the same furnace under

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Density of Magnesium from 20° to 700° C. (with Discussion)

    By Cyril S. Taylor, Junius D. Edwards

    Magnesium is the lightest metal used for structural purposes, for which reason perhaps more than usual interest is attached to measurements of its density. Although the density of solid magnesium has

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Density of Magnesium from 20° to 700° C. (with Discussion)

    By Junius D. Edwards, Cyril S. Taylor

    Magnesium is the lightest metal used for structural purposes, for which reason perhaps more than usual interest is attached to measurements of its density. Although the density of solid magnesium has

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Development of the American Water-Jacket Lead Blast-Furnace (see Discussion, p. 890)

    By R. C. Canby

    The American water-jacket furnace is the outgrowth of lead-smelting at Eureka, Nev., subsequently developed in Utah and Colorado. Early smelting in Virginia, New England, or the Missouri-Kansas-Illino

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Development of the Parkes Process in the United States

    By Ernst F. Eurich

    Alexander Parkes patented in England in 1851-52-53 a process for desilvering lead by means of zinc, making use of the greater affinity of silver for zinc than for lead, discovered by Karsten in 1842.

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Effect of Heat Treatment on Release of Stress in Bronze Castings (with Discussion)

    By Charles H. Eldridge, Robert J. Anderson

    When a metal or alloy is poured into a mold, internal stresses are set up by the cont,raction in volume on passing from the liquid state at the temperature of pouring to the solid state at the ordinar

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Effect of Heat Treatment on Release of Stress in Bronze Castings (with Discussion)

    By Robert J. Anderson, Charles H. Eldridge

    When a metal or alloy is poured into a mold, internal stresses are set up by the cont,raction in volume on passing from the liquid state at the temperature of pouring to the solid state at the ordinar

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Electric Heating and the Removal of Phosphorus from Iron

    By Albert E. Greene

    Processes for the removal of phosphorus from iron or steel are steadily assuming greater importance in view of the abundance of high-phosphorus iron-ore and the diminishing supply of pure ore. In the

    Jan 1, 1913