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  • AIME
    New York City Paper - Biographical Notice of Benjamin Silliman

    By Sterry Hunt

    The American Institute of Mining Engineers, and American science in general, have sustained a great loss in the death of Prof Benjamin Silliman, deceased at New Haven, Connecticut, on the 14th of Janu

    Jan 1, 1885

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    New York City Paper - Certain Interesting Crystalline Alloys

    By Richard Pearce

    In the treatment of auriferous copper containing bismuth, I have recently observed a small quantity of a grayish-white alloy, which on examination, proved to be Bi containing in solution, as it were,

    Jan 1, 1885

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    New York City Paper - Hematite of Franklin County, Vermont

    By Alfred F. Brainerd

    Some fifty years ago, iron-ore was discovered near the town of Sheldon, Franklin County, Vermont, in a vein out-cropping on a knoll near Black Creek, which empties into the Missisquoi River a couple o

    Jan 1, 1885

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    New York City Paper - Note on an Occurrence of Nickel and Cobalt in Nevada

    By A. D. Hodges

    In 1874 my attention was called to what seemed to me an interesting and new nickel and cobalt combination found in Ludwig and Carter's copper mine, near Mason Valley, Esmeralda County, Nevada. Wi

    Jan 1, 1885

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    New York City Paper - The Cost of Mining and Milling Gold-Ores in Nova Scotia

    By Willard Ide Pierce

    CONSIDERING the extent of the gold-fields of Nova Scotia, which occupy an area of 6000 to 7000 square miles, a few words as to the cost of extracting and reducing the ores may prove of interest. Th

    Jan 1, 1885

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    New York City Paper - The Fahnehjelm Water-Gas Incandescent Light

    By R. W. Raymond

    The idea of obtaining light from incandescent solids is not new; nor is it. new to make such bodies incandescent by holding them in a heating flame. But the successful combination of the right substan

    Jan 1, 1885

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    New York City Paper - The Use of High Explosives in the Blast Furnace and of a Water-Spray for Cooling in Blowing Down

    By W. J. Taylor

    FURNACE-MEN who have not taken advantage of the use of dynamite in certain blast-furnace troubles, as explained by Mr. Witherbee in his valuable papers read before the Institute some years since, cann

    Jan 1, 1885

  • SME
    New York City’s Harbor Siphons Water Tunnel

    By Colin Lawrence, Michael S. Schultz

    Due to the planned deepening of the NY Harbor, NYCEDC/NYCDEP is planning to replace two existing water lines between Brooklyn and Staten Island with one deeper water pipe. The crossing, just north of

    Jan 1, 2007

  • AIME
    New York Local Section

    Executive Committee. GEORGE F. KUNZ, Chairman. E. GIBBON SPILSBURY, Vice-Chairman. THOMAS ROBINS, H. J. SEAMAN. Louis D. HUNTOON, Secretary-Treasurer. Meeting, Apr. 4, 1913. A joint meeting of

    Jan 5, 1913

  • AIME
    New York Meeting (49007235-7e3a-4936-87a2-cfa22d8e25a2)

    THE Institute assembled in the rooms of the Geographical Society, Cooper Union, at 8 o'clock P.M., February 24th, 1874. President Barnard, of Columbia College, delivered an address of welcome, to

    Jan 1, 1874

  • AIME
    New York Meeting (684c07e0-6e37-4023-b1e6-4934b5134565)

    One Hundred Sixteenth Meeting of the Institute, Monday, Feb. 18, to Thursday, Feb. 21, inclusive, 1918 A preliminary program, for the New York Meeting was printed in the January Bulletin, and a more

    Jan 2, 1918

  • AIME
    New York Meeting (cf3c2914-5982-4569-bc9e-3c01c4dc3446)

    ONE HUNDRED AND FOURTEENTH MEETING OF THE INSTITUTE, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, TO THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22, INCLUSIVE, 1917 Committee on Arrangements DAVID H. BROWNE, Chairman LAWRENCE ADDICKS Louts D.

    Jan 2, 1917

  • AIME
    New York Meeting - February 1877

    The opening session of the Institute was held at the rooms of the American Society of Civil Engineers, No. 4 East 23d Street, VicePresident R. W. Raymond in the chair. After a short introductory ad

  • AIME
    New York Meeting - February, 1874

    The Institute assembled in the rooms of the Geographical Society, Cooper Union, at 8 o'clock P.M., February Nth, 1874. President Barnard, of Columbia College, delivered an address of Welcome, to

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