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  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - A Direct Process of Copper Smelting

    By Henry M. Howe

    Many direct processes have been proposed for the treatment of oxidized ores of copper by reducing the copper oxide to the metallic state, and by separating it from its impurities by a subsequent fusio

    Jan 1, 1879

  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - A List of Minerals Containing at Least One Per Cent. of Phosphoric Acid

    By William P. Blake

    The occurrence and distribution of phosphorus is one of the most important questions with which the steel-maker has to do. Large sums are invested in processes for the removal of this element from ore

    Jan 1, 1893

  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - A New Method of Removing Skulls from Direct-Metal Ladles

    By Davis Baker

    The direct-metal cars or ladles of the Maryland Steel Company have a capacity of 18 tons when filled within 12 inches of the top. On account of this large capacity, the formation of skulls in these la

    Jan 1, 1893

  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - A New Tin Mineral in the Black Hills

    By Titus Ulke

    About two years ago, in making an examination of the Etta mine for the Harney Peak Tin Co., I discovered, in a vertical secondary quartz-vein in the granite massive of Etta mountain, the mineral about

    Jan 1, 1893

  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - A Preliminary Sketch of the Phosphates of Florida

    By George H. Eldridge

    The existence of phosphate of lime within the State of Florida has been known for over a decade; but until the spring of 1887, the extent and value of its deposit.;, possibly with one exception, were

    Jan 1, 1893

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - Ancient Method of Silver-Lead Smelting in Peru

    By Otto F. Pfordte

    Although the subject has no practical bearing on the metallurgy of the present day, it may not be entirely uninteresting to note how the art of silver-lead smelting has been, and in a few remote distr

    Jan 1, 1893

  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - Basic Slags as Fertilizers

    By W. H. Morris

    I have been requested to present a paper on the slag from the basic Bessemer process, as prepared for fertilizing. Since Professor W. B. Phillips presented at the Birmingham meeting, in May, 1888, an

    Jan 1, 1893

  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - Bohemian Garnets

    By George Frederick Kunz

    The garnet-district of Bohemia is situated about 60 kilometers northwest of Prague, and is bounded on the north by Meronitz and Trebnice, 12 miles apart, and by Decany and Skan on the south. This regi

    Jan 1, 1893

  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - Discussion of Dr. CHARLES B. DUDLEY'S Papers on Steel Rails, Lake George Meeting, October 1877

    Remarks of Mr. Robert W. Hunt, General, Superintendent, Albany and Rensselaer Iron and Steel Company., Troy N. Y.—In discussing Dr. Dudley's two most interesting papers, I feel a natural hesitanc

    Jan 1, 1879

  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - Extraction of Ore from Wide Veins or Masses

    By G. D. Delprat

    The object of this paper is to describe an application of the crosscut system of mining, as carried on in the Cabezas del Pasto mine, one of the copper-mines in the sooth of Spain. The system is not n

    Jan 1, 1893

  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - Fluorspar-Deposits of Southern Illinois

    By S. F. Emmons

    There is, in the southern part of the State of Illinois, a series of deposits of fluorspar and galena in which the former mineral occurs on a scale of magnitude unequalled, so far as I know, in any ot

    Jan 1, 1893

  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - Granulating Magnetic Iron-Ores with the Sturtevant Mill at Croton Magnetic Iron-Mines, N. Y.

    By W. H. Hoffman

    At the Glen Summit meeting (Trans., xx., 605) I described in a general way the grinding-machine known as the Sturtevant mill, built by the Sturtevant Mill Co., of Boston, Mass. My first experiments in

    Jan 1, 1893

  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - High-pressure Hydraulic Presses in Iron Works

    By R. M. Daelen

    Mechanical science is severely tested by the demands of the iron manufacture for the varied apparatus needed to transport and to treat raw materials and products. Water has long been a favorite means

    Jan 1, 1893

  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - Indicator Cards from a Water-pressure Blowing Engine, with a Note on a Proposed Improvement in such Engines

    By Frank Firmstone

    The indicator cards shown herewith were taken by the writer in June, 1877, from the water-pressure blowing engine of the Longdale Iron Co., at Lucy Selina Furnace, Longdale, Virginia. A description

    Jan 1, 1879

  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - La Gardette: The History of a French Gold-Mine

    By T. A. Rickard

    The mountains of the picturesque Dauphine, in southeastern France, have long been known to collectors as the source of many minerals of rare occurrence; but. they contain also several mines, which, th

    Jan 1, 1893

  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - Laurentian Low-Grade Phosphate-Ores

    By John Stewart

    The market at present supplied by shipments from the phosphate districts of Quebec, Ontario, and New York State requires high-grade ore, carrying from 75 per cent. to 90 per cent. of phosphate of lime

    Jan 1, 1893

  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - Note on the Cost and Speed of Sinking the East Shaft of the New Kleinfontein Co., Benoni, South Africa

    By Edward J. Way

    +1KLEINFONTEIN GROUP CENTRAL ADMlNISTRATION, BENONI, TRANSVAAL, S. AFRICA. The cost and the speed of sinking a shaft are factors of so great importance in operating a mine, that the data given in T

    Jan 1, 1905

  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - Notes on the Geological Origin of Phosphate of Lime in the United States and Canada

    By Walter B. M. Davidson

    Phosphorus is one of the elements having the widest distribu tion, and phosphoric acid plays an important part in the composition of the crust of the earth. It is allied in various chemical combina- t

    Jan 1, 1893

  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - Notes on the Selection of Iron-Ores, Limestones, and Fuels for the Blast-Furnace

    By Fred W. Gordon

    Apart from the character of pig-iron to be manufactured, other than that it shall be well reduced and open-grained, the selection of the materials should be such as to produce it at the lowest cost. A

    Jan 1, 1893