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New York Paper - Pyritic Smelting and Basic Converting at the Kosaka Copper Smelter, Japan (with Discussion)
By Kenzo Ikeda
The Kosaka smelter is situated in the extreme northern end of Hondo (the main island of Japan) 15 mi. east of Odate, on the government railroad, to which it is connected by a private railway. It conta
Jan 1, 1923
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New York Paper - Heap Leaching at Bisbee, Arizona (with Discussion)
By G. D. Van Ardsdale, A. W. Hudson
Heap leaching, as practiced at Rio Tinto, Spain, while one of the oldest, and probably one of the cheapest, methods of extracting copper from its ores, has not had, until recently, other than experime
Jan 1, 1923
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New York Paper - Relative Efficiency of Amalgamation and Cyaniding
By Allan J. Clark, W. J. Sharwood
When the cyanide process came into general use, late in the nineteenth century, chlorination was quickly supplanted, but amalgamation yielded place more slowly, being still the major process at many p
Jan 1, 1923
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New York Paper - Soluble Silica in the Preparation of Zinc-sulfate Solution for Electrolysis (with Discussion)
By Jesse O. Betterton
Recently some experimental work was conducted by the author in connection with the direct leaching of certain zinc ores with sulfuric acid with the object of subsequently recovering the zinc by electr
Jan 1, 1923
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Canadian Paper - Proposed Plan for Crushing, Grinding, and Concentrating Low-grade Sulfide Ore (with Discussion)
By Arthur Crowfoot
As a result of work done, on an operating scale, in its experimental mill during 1920 and 1921, the plan here given was proposed for crushing, grinding, and concentrating low-grade sulfide ores at the
Jan 1, 1923
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Canadian Paper - A Contribution to the Kick versus Rittinger Dispute (with Discussion)
By H. E. T. Haultain
The study of rock crushing or grinding in tube-mills is difficult on account of the large size of the units employed in the field and the large number of variables entering into the problem. Three
Jan 1, 1923
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Canadian Paper - Ball Paths in Tube-mills and Rock Crushing in Rolls (with Discussion)
By F. C. Dyer, H. E. T. Haultain
There has been much written on ball-mills, but no small amount of the literature is simply the expression of individual opinion without sufficient data. This is no doubt due to the complexity and obsc
Jan 1, 1923
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Canadian Paper - Mining Methods at Bawdin Mine
By A. B. Calhoun
These mines, which belong to the Burma Corporation, Ltd., formerly a London company now incorporated in Rangoon, Burma, are situated in the semi-independent state of Tawng-Peng, one of the small divis
Jan 1, 1923
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New York Paper - The Rove Tunnel
By M. Mathieu
The Rove tunnel is the means by which the canal from Marseilles to the Rhone Riverl penetrates the hills of Nerthe, lying between Mar- seilles harbor and Lake Berre, Fig. 1. The canal will communic
Jan 1, 1923
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New York Paper - Design and Operation of Roberts Coke Oven (with Discussion)
By M. W. Ditto
THe conversion of the beehive coke plants, in this country, to byproduct plants has been slow, because the coal supplies were near the centers of the steel industry. With the growth of this industry,
Jan 1, 1923
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New York Paper - Heat Distribution in New Type Koppers Coke Oven
By Jos. Van Ackeren
Although the Siemens regenerator principle was introduced into byproduct coke-oven design about 40 years ago, many problems of construction, and particularly of heat distribution and pressure conditio
Jan 1, 1923
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New York Paper - Combustion of Blast-furnace Cokes in Fuel Beds (with Discussion)
By Ralph A. Sherman, John Blizard
The experimental investigation described in this paper was conducted to determine the relative combustibilities of different samples of blastfurnace coke when burned in a current of air in a small fur
Jan 1, 1923
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New York Paper - Combustion of Coke in Blast-furnace Hearth (with Discussion)
By G. St. J. Perrot, S. P. Kinney
Consumers of metallurgical coke are agreed that the quality of their fuel plays an important part in the performance of the furnace. Less unanimous agreement is evident when the properties of a desira
Jan 1, 1923
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New York Paper - Forms of Sulfur in Coke, and Their Relations to Blast-furnace Reactions (with Discussion)
By S. P. Kinney
Sulfur has been one of the most troublesome elements encountered since the earliest days of iron smelting, and this problem will become of increasing importance as the higher sulfur coke is used, beca
Jan 1, 1923
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Canadian Paper - Desulfurizing Power of Iron Blast-furnace Slags (with Discussion)
By Joseph F. Oesterele, Richard S. McCaffery
This investigation was undertaken to determine the quality of different iron blast-furnace slags as desulfurizing agents, and the possibility of using, in the blast furnace, materials of higher sulfur
Jan 1, 1923
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New York Paper - Use of Magnetic Ore in the Blast Furnace
By G. P. Pilling
The use of magnetic ore in the blast furnace is a subject of increasing importance. The end of the deposits of lake ore is in sight, although not imminent, and unless some new field is discovered, the
Jan 1, 1923
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Canadian Paper - Some Problems in Ground Movement and Subsidence (with Discussion)
By George S. Rice
Those who for the first time see, at a mine, a great hole caused by subsidence; or, going underground, see an extensive fall of roof or hanging wall are apt to regard such an occurrence as an accident
Jan 1, 1923
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New York Paper - Subsidence at Miami, Arizona (with Discussion)
By J. Parke Channing
The Miami orebody occurs in an altered Pinal schist. It is popularly known as one of the '(porphyry " deposits but, as at Inspiration and Ray, the ore is an altered mincralized Pinal schist. The
Jan 1, 1923
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New York Paper - Mining an Upper Bituminous Seam after a Lower Seam has been Extracted (with Discussion)
By Howard N. Eavenson
In many of the bituminous-coal districts of this country, more than one seam of workable coal exists, and in most cases the lower seam is the more attractive, owing to either its greater thickness or
Jan 1, 1923
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New York Paper - Examples of Subsidence in Two Oklahoma Coal Mines (with Discussion)
By J. J. Rutledge
On Sept. 4, 1914, Mine No. 1 of the Union Coal Co., Adamson, Oklahoma, suddenly caved, entombing thirteen miners whose bodies were never recovered. The seam of coal mined, the Lower Hartshorne, averag
Jan 1, 1923