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New York Paper - Notes on the Siemens Direct Process
By A. L. Holley
There is a growing demand for pure and cheap material for fine open-hearth steel; a material not only very free from phosphorus, but from carbon and silicon; so that it may he rapidly converted into s
Jan 1, 1880
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Notes On Battery And Copper-Plate Amalgamation - From The Mining Laboratory of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston
By Robert H. Richards
VERY little has been published recently on this subject in the mining journals or proceedings of societies. The attention of experts has been diverted perhaps by the demands for pan amalgamation of re
Jan 1, 1880
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The Successful Manufacture of Pressed Fuel at Port Richmond, Philadelphia, Pa.
By E. F. Loiseau
IN a paper on the manufacture of artificial fuel, read at the Philadelphia meeting of February, 1878, I enumerated the difficulties which I had to overcome before succeeding in the mixing of coal-dust
Jan 1, 1880
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The American Bloomary Process For Making Iron Direct From The Ore.*
By T. Egleston
THE direct process for the manufacture of iron which is principally used in the United States, in New York and New Jersey, is called the Jersey forge, the Champlain forge, the Catalan forge, the Bloom
Jan 1, 1880
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Pittsburgh Parper - Regenerative Stoves-A Sketch of their History and Notes on their Use
By John M. Hartman
On May 19th, 1857, an English patent was granted to E. A. Cowper for heating air or other gases under pressure by means of a regenerator inclosed in an air-tight iron case, having between the regenera
Jan 1, 1880
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Pittsburgh Parper - On an Apparatus for Testing the Resistance of Metals to Repeated Shocks
By William Kent
More than twelve years were spent by Wöhler at the instance of the Prussian Government in experimenting upon the resistance of iron and steel to repeated stresses. The results of his experiments are e
Jan 1, 1880
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New York Paper - The Determination of Sulphur in Sulphides and in Coal and Coke
By Thomas M. Drown
The use of bromine as an oxidizing agent, particularly for sul phur, has become very general in analysis, replacing the stronger oxidizing acids. The object of this paper is to describe briefly the ex
Jan 1, 1880
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Index (c13eefce-7986-4fe2-98a7-2c3ccee32f37)
Jan 1, 1880
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Pittsburgh Parper - On Some Curious Phenomena Observed in Making a Test of a Piece of Bessemer Steel
By William Kent
About a year ago, the writer had occasion to assist Mr. John L. Gill, Jr., of the Pittsburgh Car-wheel Works, in malting a trial of his new testing machine. A piece of Bessemer steel, of about .34 car
Jan 1, 1880
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Phosphor us in Bituminous Coal and Coke
By Andrew S. McCreath
THE manufacture of pig iron for conversion into steel by the Bessemer and open-hearth processes, is now one of the most important industries of the United States. It is necessary that iron intended fo
Jan 1, 1880
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Pittsburgh Parper - On the Use of Determining Slag Densities in Smelting
By Thomas MacFarlane
In smelting copper, lead, and silver ores, it is scarcely possible in every case to make analyses of the various parcels of ore, with the view of combining these and the fluxes so accurately as to yie
Jan 1, 1880
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Supplement I. To a Catalogue of Official Reports Upon Geological Surveys of the United States and Territories, and of British North America
By Frederick Prime
IN this supplementary list no titles to which an * is prefixed have been seen by the compiler; and he will be most thankful to have any omissions or inaccuracies in the list sent to him to be publishe
Jan 1, 1880
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The Tessié Gas Producer
By A. L. Holley
THOSE who are familiar with working gas furnaces will perhaps admit that the ordinary producer is the least satisfactory feature of the- whole system, chiefly by reason of its great waste of fuel, bot
Jan 1, 1880
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Pittsburgh Meeting - May, 1879
Jan 1, 1880
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Montreal Paper - Relations of Sulphur in Coal and Coke
By James P. Kimball
Sulphur is always present in mineral coal of every variety. In the oxidized state it may exist as sulphuric acid in combination with a base. In the unoxidized state it exists in combination with iron
Jan 1, 1880
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Pittsburgh Parper - The Hygienie of Mines
By R. W. Raymond
[NoTE.—-This paper was presented at the Pittsburgh meeting in a partially completed form, and I fully expected to obtain, before the period of its publication, both the data and the leisure required f
Jan 1, 1880
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New York Paper - The American Bloomary Process for Making Iron Direct from the Ore
By T. Egleston
The direct process for the manufacture of iron which is principally used in the United States, in New York and New Jersey, is called the Jersey forge, the Champlain forge, the Catalan forge, the Bloom
Jan 1, 1880
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Blast-Furnace Working
By Julian Kennedy Edgar
THINKING that it may prove of interest to the Institute, I have prepared a short account of the blowing in and subsequent working of the "A" furnace of the Edgar Thomson Steel Works. This furnace was
Jan 1, 1880
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Montreal Paper - Note on the Zinc Deposits of Southern Missouri.
By Rossiter W. Raymond
The lead-mining industry of Missouri, as of other parts of the Mississippi basin, appears to have been paralyzed by the shock of competition with the mines of the States and Territories further west.
Jan 1, 1880