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  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - Pittsburgh and Vicinity-A Brief Record of Seven Years' Progress

    By William P. Shinn

    It is almost exactly seven years since the last previous meeting of the Institute in this city. In a paper on " Pittsburgh, its Resources and Sorroundings," read at that meeting, I showed that Alleghe

    Jan 1, 1886

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - Professional Ethics

    By J. C. Bayles

    Jan 1, 1886

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - Proposed Apparatus for Determining the Heating Power of Different Fuels

    By William Kent

    Mr. ASHBURNER's paper on the Classification and Composition of Pennsylvania Anthracites, read at this meeting, well shows the need of new and accurate determinations of the heating value of these

    Jan 1, 1886

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - Recent Failures of Steel Boiler-Plates

    By William Kent

    A MOST startling and as yet unexplained, failure of steel boilerplates, in two different sets of boilers, is reported in a paper by Arthur J. Maginnis, published in the London Engineer, December 11th,

    Jan 1, 1886

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - Remarks on the Precipitation of Gold in a Reverberatory Hearth

    By R. W. Raymond

    I wish to call the attention of the Institute to a curious subject, brought to my notice last summer by Mr. Begger, the accomplished metallurgist of the smelting-works of the Boston and Colorado Compa

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - Remarks on the Wickersham Process of Refining Pig-Iron

    By Edmund C. Pechin

    I REGRET that I am unable to present this subject in definite form and detail. All I shall attempt at this meeting is to lay before you some curious facts, the bearings and explanations of which must

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - Soft Steel for Boiler-Plates

    By Alfred E. Hunt

    The technical papers of the last few years give numerous in stances of serious failures by cracking or rupture of soft steel boiler plates, marly of which have satisfactorily passed the rigid inspecti

    Jan 1, 1886

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - The Clapp-Griffiths Converter: Later Practice and Commercial Results.

    By J. P. Witherow

    The plant of Messrs. Oliver Brothers and Phillips, the only one in operation until January, 1886, has not been available for any further experiments since those of Mr. R. W. Hunt, described in his pap

    Jan 1, 1886

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - The Classification and Composition of Pennsylvania Anthracites

    By Charles A. Ashburner

    The manufacturing and domestic consumers of anthracite are beginning to realize the fact more fully, that the coal purchased for any one year does not seem to burn so freely, does not fire with so lit

    Jan 1, 1886

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - The Cornwall Iron-Ore Mines, Lebanon County, Pa.

    By E. V. d’Invilliers

    The position of these magnetic ore-mines, with reference to the county-seat, is shown in Fig. 1. They are situated on the south margin of the Great Valley, five miles south of Lebanon, and about midwa

    Jan 1, 1886

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - The Geology of the Pittsburgh Coal-Region

    By J. P. Lesley

    The Pittsburgh coal-region, if we regard the greatness of its extent, the picturesque beauty of its scenery, the salubrity of its climate, its relative situation on the Continent, the fertility of its

    Jan 1, 1886

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - The Heine Safety-Boiler

    By E. D. Meier

    SINCE Dr. St. Albans, in 1840, began to build successful watertube boilers—some of which are still in use—the gravity-return water-tube boiler has been built in many forms, more or less familiar to al

    Jan 1, 1886

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - The Longwall System of Mining

    By J. W. Harden

    APART from the merits of the respective systems of mining under conditions alike, there is much in the nature of the coal and the measures with which it is associated, to make that system which is suc

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - The Manufacture of Fire-Brick at Mount Savage, Maryland.

    By Robert Anderson Cook

    The subject of refractory materials occupies such an important position in all metallurgical works, and particularly in those of iron and steel, that any data concerning it must be of interest to the

    Jan 1, 1886

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - The Microscopic Structure of Car-Wheel Iron

    By F. Lynwood Garrison

    The study of the microscopic structure of the iron of car-wheels, which it is the aim of this paper to describe, was made at the suggestion of Dr. Dudley, whose paper upon the constitution of cast-iro

    Jan 1, 1886

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - The Mineral Resources of the Hudson's Bay Territories

    By Robert Bell

    The regions to which this paper refers include the whole of the Dominion of Canada east of the 130 Rocky Mountains and north of the water-shed of the St. Lawrence. Very little exploration for economic

    Jan 1, 1886

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - The Mining Compass and Trigonometer

    By Reich G. Gaertner

    Almost every mining engineer who has had charge of extensive underground workings will have observed how often directions as to course and levels, deduced from careful theodolite measurements, have be

    Jan 1, 1886

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - The Nova Scotia Gold Mines

    By E. Gilpin

    The Nova Scotian gold fields have yielded so little in comparison with those of the United States, that a lengthy description of them would almost appear unnecessary. However, not only are they intere

    Jan 1, 1886

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - The Position of the American Pig-Iron Manufacture

    By Edmund C. Pechin

    THE iron trade of America seems on the point of a new departure. After years of struggling against heavy odds, patient endurance in periods of depression and loss, fears and hopes alternating as fail

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - The Process Used at the Comstock for Refining Coppery Bullion Produced by Amalgamating Tailings

    By A. D. Hodges

    The process to be described, whatever other merits (or demerits) it may have possessed, certainly proved a financial success under the conditions of the locality where it was introduced and where a re

    Jan 1, 1886