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Colorado Paper - High Percentage of Lime on Lead Shaft Furnace SlagsBy Albert F. Schneider
The peculiar conditions under which lead and silver ores are now smelted in Salt Lake Valley, Utah, render it advantageous to make slags that are siliceous and carry a high percentage of lime. The
Jan 1, 1883
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Colorado Paper - Imaginary BoundariesBy R. W. Raymond
In my paper on " End-Lines and Side-Lines in the Mining Law," read at the New York meeting of February, 1889 (Trans., xvii., 787), I discussed certain points involving the rights of a locator, B, who
Jan 1, 1890
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Colorado Paper - Improved French Pocket-CompassBy R. A. Bergier
The Transactions of the Institute contain nothing, as yet, on the subject of pocket-compasses; and in the belief that American miners, explorers, geologists, and engineers will gladly welcome any info
Jan 1, 1890
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Colorado Paper - Influence of Silicon on the Determination of Phosphors in Iron.By Thomas M. Drown
The process for determining phosphorus in iron now in most general use in the laboratories of iron and steel works, is, I think, the one proposed bv Mr. Emmerton." In this process the solution of the
Jan 1, 1890
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Colorado Paper - Interpretation of So-called Paraffin Dirt of Gulf Coast Oil Fields (with Discussion)By A. D. Brokaw
The so-called "paraffin dirt" of the Gulf Coast oil fields has been considered an indication of the possible presence of oil and gas, and not a few wells have been brought in solely on the basis of su
Jan 1, 1920
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Colorado Paper - Laboratory Note on the Heat-Conductivity, Expansion and Fusibility of Fire-Brick (see Discussion, 1060)By J. D. Pennock
The different samples of brick examined were Grecian magnesite, American magnesite; silica brick and coke-oven tiling made in Belgium and used in retort coke-ovens. The Grecian magnesite was furnis
Jan 1, 1897
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Colorado Paper - Laboratory-Teats in Connection With the Extraction of Gold from Ores by the Cyanide ProcessBy H. Van F. Furman
As the cyanide-method for the extraction of gold from ores is extensively used in the United States and elsewhere, and appears destined to prove a factor of increasing importance in the metallurgy of
Jan 1, 1897
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Colorado Paper - Limonite Deposits of Mayaguez Mesa, Porto RicoBy C. R. Fettke, Bela Hubbard
During the summer of 1916, while on a visit to the United States Agricultural Experiment Station at Mayaguez, Porto Rico, the writers were told by D. W. May, the director, that an occurrence of mangan
Jan 1, 1920
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Colorado Paper - Lithology of Berea Sand in Southern Ohio and Its Effect on ProductionBy L. S. Panyity
The State of Ohio is among the pioneers in the production of oil and gas. Numerous anticlinals, such as the Macksburg, Cow Run and Newport, have been thoroughly developed, and the pools found in conne
Jan 1, 1920
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Colorado Paper - Losses of Crude Oil in Steel and Earthen StorageBy O. U. Bradley
The extent of losses, due to evaporation, sediment, and water, in crude oil stored in steel tanks, is a very interesting question, and particularly so at this time, when every reasonable measure shoul
Jan 1, 1920
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Colorado Paper - Magnetic Observations in Geological MappingBy Henry Lloyd Smyth
In 1891-92 1 was entrusted with the geological survey of part of the large area lying between the Marquette and Menominee iron-ranges in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, and extending from the Republi
Jan 1, 1897
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Colorado Paper - Manufacture of Ferro-alloys in the Electric Furnace (with Discussion)By R. M. Keeney
Before the outbreak of the war in 1914, the only electric-furnace smelting plant operating on a commercial basis west of the Mississippi River was an electric pig-iron plant in California; rare metal
Jan 1, 1920
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Colorado Paper - Mechanics of Vein Formation (with Discussion)By Stephen Taber
A vein may be defined as an aggregation of mineral matter, more or less tabular or lenticular in form, which was deposited from solution and is of later origin than the inclosing rock. This definition
Jan 1, 1920
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Colorado Paper - Metallography of Tungsten (with Discussion)By Zay Jeffries
Tungsten has the highest melting point of all the known metals, namely 3350 C.; it is one of the hardest of the metals; it has the highest equiaxing or recrystallization temperature after strain harde
Jan 1, 1919
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Colorado Paper - Method of Fixing Prices of Bituminous Coal Adopted by U. S. Fuel Administration (with Discussion)By J. H. Allport, C. Garnsey
During the latter part of 1916 and the early months of 1917, due to war activities, there was a threatened shortage of coal which resulted in panic among consumers and a rush to obtain coal at once at
Jan 1, 1920
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Colorado Paper - Middle-Product Jig, with Adjustable and Automatic Discharges for the Middle and Lower ProductBy Edgar G. Tuttle
The accompanying figures show a jig arranged for separating the middle product or middlings obtained in the concentration of certain ores, minerals, coal, etc. In the preparation for sizing, prior
Jan 1, 1897
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Colorado Paper - Molybdenite Operations at Climax, ColoradoBy D. F. Haley
The molybdenite deposits at Climax, Colo., have recently attracted considerable notice, because of their great size, as compared with other known deposits of the same mineral. Climax station, on th
Jan 1, 1920
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Colorado Paper - Note on a Shaft-Fire and its LessonBy Robert Gilman Brown
There are few disasters so difficult to deal with as an underground fire. It is inaccessible at best, and generally unapproachable ; and it finds most material in the very places where it can do most
Jan 1, 1897
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Colorado Paper - Note on Copper in Iron and SteelBy R. W. Raymond
After the publication of the Atlanta paper of Mr. Robert W. Hunt on " Specifications for Steel Rails of Heavy Sections Manufactured West of the Alleghenies,"* I received from Mr. B. F. Fackenthal, Jr.
Jan 1, 1897
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Colorado Paper - Notes on Some Reactions of TitaniumBy Ellen H. Richards
It is of importance to analysts to have a ready means of detecting the presence of small quantities of titaninm in iron ores and in certain fluxes and slags. The method given in Elderhorst's Blow
Jan 1, 1883