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  • CIM
    Bird River Chromite Deposits, Manitoba

    By J. D. Bateman

    DURING the summer of 1942 several chromite deposits were discovered in the Lac du Bonnet district about eighty miles northeast of Winnipeg. The deposits are confined to the Bird River complex, a folde

    Jan 1, 1943

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    Biringuccio's "Pirotechnia" - A Neglected Italian Metallurgical Classic

    By Cyril S., Smith

    WE cannot but marvel at the fact that fire is necessary for almost every operation. It takes the sands of the earth and melts them-now into glass, now into silver, minium or other lead or some substan

    Jan 1, 1940

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    Birmingham Paper - A Water-Manometer and Anemometer

    By J. M. Silliman

    Several years ago, having occasion to determine the amount of some very slight atmospheric depressions, I devised and had constructed by a skilful tinsmith the manometer shown in the accompanying draw

    Jan 1, 1889

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    Birmingham Paper - Biographical Notice of Byron W. Chewer - May 1888

    By William H. Pettee

    A few weeks ago the Institute lost, by death, from its list of members one who in recent years, by frequent attendance at meetings, by the preparation of papers, and in many other ways, had shown a wa

    Jan 1, 1888

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    Birmingham Paper - Byproduct Coking in Alabama (with Discussion)

    By F. W. Miller

    Prior to the Civil War, there were several small charcoal furnaces for smelting the brown limonite ore that is found, in comparatively small bodies, throughout the central and north-central portions o

    Jan 1, 1925

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    Birmingham Paper - Calculations of the Available Heat and the Required Dimensions of Chimneys, Combustion-Chambers, and Gas-Burners in the Use of Blast-Furnace Gases for Firing Boilers

    By Frank C. Roberts

    Neglecting the hydrogen and hydrocarbons, 1 will assume the following analysis as a fair average composition, by weight, of the waste gases escaping from a coke-burning blast-furnace: CO2............

    Jan 1, 1889

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    Birmingham Paper - Coal Washing Practice in Alabama (with Discussion)

    By H. S. Geismer

    Campbell,' in 1896 said: "The Birmingham district in Alabama has certain great advantages for there are few places in the world where fuel and ore are so near together, although, unfortunately, b

    Jan 1, 1925

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    Birmingham Paper - Large Furnaces on Alabama Material

    By Fred W. Gordon

    The heading of this paper was prompted by the knowledge that experience, up to this time, seemed to indicate that smaller furnaces were preferable for smelting the material of this section. Since t

    Jan 1, 1889

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    Birmingham Paper - Manufacture of Ferrophosphorous at Rockdale, Tenn.

    By James A. Barr

    Ferrophosphorus, an alloy of phosphorus and iron or perhaps a physical mixture of definite compounds of iron and phosphorus, has become of increasing importance as the use of the basic open hearth has

    Jan 1, 1925

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    Birmingham Paper - Mascot, Tennessee, Zinc Area

    By Wilbur A. Nelson

    In 1839, Gerard Troost,1 the first State Geologist of Tennessee, reported the occurrence of zinc ores in east Tennessee, in connection with the iron ores at Embreeville; in 1844,2 he refers to the zin

    Jan 1, 1925

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    Birmingham Paper - Notes on the Clinton Group in Alabama

    By Truman H. Aldrich

    The red, or fossiliferous, ore is found in the Clinton group of the Silurian formation. This group is from 100 to 500 ft. thick in Alabama, and its outcrops have been mapped by the State or the U. S.

    Jan 1, 1925

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    Birmingham Paper - Notes on the Geology and on some of the Mines of Aspen Mountain, Pitkin County, Colorado

    By Carl Henrich

    Aspen, the flourishing mountain- and mining-town of Pitkin county, Colorado, is located in the valley of the Roaring Fork, 11 miles above Glenwood springs, where that stream empties its waters into Gr

    Jan 1, 1889

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    Birmingham Paper - Smelting Copper Concentrates in a Converter

    By F. J. Longworth

    FoR a number of years an intensive study has been made to improve the blast-furnace practice at Copperhill not only as to cost% but to provide a good grade of gas for the acid plants. This study took

    Jan 1, 1925

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    Birmingham Paper - The Cost of a Ton of Pig-Iron in the Sequachee Valley

    By William M. Bowron

    An interesting calculation was made at the Chattanooga Meeting of 1885 as to the cost of making a ton of pig-iron in the Chatta-

    Jan 1, 1889

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    Birmingham Paper - The Efficiency of a Steam-Boiler using the Waste Gas of a Blast-Furnace as Fuel

    By D. S. Jacobus

    The boiler here referred to was of the water-tube type, having 2535 square feet of heating-surface, which the makers held to be capable of generating 325 horse-power of steam; this being understood to

    Jan 1, 1889

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    Birth Effects In Areas Of Uranium Mining

    By William H. Wiese

    Anecdotal reports of high rates of congenital malformations and spontaneous abortions at the Shiprock Indian Health Service Hospital in San Juan County, New Mexico prompted an interview survey, obtain

    Jan 1, 1981

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    Birth Of A Longwall-Initial Planning To Post-Subsidence Mitigation

    By E. D. Doney

    The Kerr-McGee Coal Corporation's Galatia Mine's first longwall mining system was implemented on May 3; 1989. Start-up of the longwall face represnted the successful conclusion of an effort

    Jan 1, 1990