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  • AIME
    Washington Paper - The Lewis and Bartlett Bag-Process of Collecting Lead-Fumes at the Lone Elm Works, Joplin, Missouri

    By F. P. Dewey

    The most serious problem that confronts the lead-smelter is the waste caused during smelting by the volatilization of both lead and silver, which are consequently lost in the form of fume. It is not d

    Jan 1, 1890

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - The Magmatic Origin of Vein-Forming Waters in Southeastern Alaska

    By Arthur C. Spencer

    Having suggested magmatic waters as the probable agents of vein- and ore-deposition in Southeastern Alaska in a paper entitled, The Geology of the Treadwell Ore-Deposits,' it is with particular i

    Jan 1, 1906

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - The Manufacture and Characteristics of Wrought-Iron

    By James P. Roe

    Those who deem the subject of this paper an old and superseded one may recall with advantage the words of the great proverb-maker, bidding us to seek the new in the ashes of the old. The manufactur

    Jan 1, 1906

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - The Manufacture of Coke in Northern China

    By Yang Tsang Woo

    The method of making coke that has been adopted at the Kaiping and other collieries in northern China resembles, to some extent, the familiar bee-hive oven process of the United States, except that a

    Jan 1, 1906

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - The Manufacture of Ferro-Manganese in Georgia

    By Willard P. Ward

    It is the object of the present paper to bring to the notice of members of this Institute, the results of experiments made during the past six months in the manufacture of the alloys of iron and manga

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - The Midlothian, Virginia, Colliery, In 1876

    By Oswald J. Heinrich

    In the coal review for the United States for 1875, the Engineering and Mining Journal, January 1st,, 1876, remarks about the Richmond coal basin: "It has contributed but little to the supply of fue

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - The Mints and Assay Offices of Europe

    By Pierre de P. Ricketts

    Having had occasion while in Europe during the past summer to visit some of the foreign mints and assay offices connected with the same, I thought a brief description of the general process of coining

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - The Occurrence and Treatment of the Argentiferous Manganese Ores of Tombstone District, Arizona

    By C. W. Goodale

    As an appendix to the above-mentioned paper, a drawing of the vertical projection of the Knoxville mine workings is here given. In my paper it was stated that the ore-chimneys are found along a cra

    Jan 1, 1890

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - The Occurrence of Stibnite at Steamboat Springs, Nevada

    By Waldemar Lindgren

    The important investigations of Dr. G. F. Becker at Steamboat Springs, Nev., in 1885, aided by the analytical work of W. H. Melville, established the fact that sulphides were being deposited at the su

    Jan 1, 1906

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - The Origin of Vein-Filled Openings in Southeastern Alaska

    By Arthur C. Spencer

    In extension of a suggestion already made to account for certain features observed in the Juneau gold-belt in southeastern Alaska,' it is the object of the present paper to indicate in detail cer

    Jan 1, 1906

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - The Outlook for Coal-Mining in Alaska

    By Alfred H. Brooks

    Less than a decade ago the consumption of coal in Alaska was practically limited to the salmon canneries and the few ode-mines and settlements along the Pacific coast of the The-itory. The sparse popu

    Jan 1, 1906

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - The Properties of Aluminum, With Some Information Relating to the Metal

    By A. E. Hunt

    A GREAT deal that has been written heretofore about the properties of aluminum is of doubtful value, owing to the lack of knowledge we have of the purity of the aluminum referred to. Much of the metal

    Jan 1, 1890

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Washington Paper - The Roller-Pallet System for the Manufacture of Bricks

    By Clemens Catesby Jones

    One of the achievements of the present century has been the development of brick-making from the crude and humble handicraft of the individual to a potential industry employing machinery, requiring im

    Jan 1, 1901

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - The Rush Creek, Arkansas, Zinc District

    By H. M. Chance

    One hundred and twenty miles of hard travel over steep ridges almost due east from Fayetteville, on the St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad, about 100 miles from Eureka Hot Springs, or 75 miles north

    Jan 1, 1890

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - The Secondary Enrichment of Ore-Deposits

    By S. F. Emmons

    It was said by many who discussed Professor Posepny's admirable paper on the "Genesis of Ore-Deposits," read at the Chicago meeting of the Institute, in 1893, that its most valuable feature was t

    Jan 1, 1901

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - The Spahtic Iron Ores of the Hudson River

    By R. W. Raymond

    I DESIRE to call the attention of the Institute briefly, and by no means in the way of an exhaustive description, to the interesting developments recently made on the east bank of the Hudson River, in

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - The Testing of Gas-Producers

    By Samuel S. Wyer

    The following description of methods for conducting gas-producer tests is probably the first attempt to give the subject an analytical, thorough and comprehensive treatment. In some cases where tes

    Jan 1, 1906

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - The United States Prototype Standards of Weight and Measure

    By T. C. Mendenhall

    All persons, actively engaged in your profession, must have a natural interest in the subject of weights and measures. All members of the engineering profession have to do with operations of weighing

    Jan 1, 1890

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - The Use of High Percentages of Fine Ore ill a Charcoal Blast-Furnace

    By Harry R. Hall

    The proposition to make pig-iron from magnetic concentrates and cobbed ore with charcoal-fuel weighing from 12 to 20 lb. per bushel is, on the face of it, not inviting; but the work that has been done

    Jan 1, 1906