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  • AIME
    Boston Paper - A Method for the Estimation of Manganese in Steel

    By Frank Julian

    The determination of manganese by precipitation with potassium chlorate from a solution in concentrated nitric acid, filtration through asbestos, and solution in a reducing agent whose excess is estim

    Jan 1, 1888

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - A Suggested Cure for Blast-Furnace Chills

    By Henry M. Howe

    The object of the present paper is to suggest injecting into the hearths of iron blast furnaces, whose temperature has become unduly lowered, some form of fuel whose calorific intensity, under the pec

    Jan 1, 1883

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - An Improved System of Water-Supply for Hydraulic Mining

    By H. D. Pearsall

    It is well that the usual system for supplying water at high pressure purposes of hydraulic mining possesses serious disadvantageense, delay and large annual repairs. Where plough work possible, the f

    Jan 1, 1888

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - Block Tin Resulting from Distillation of n Tin Amalgam

    By Robert H. Richards

    In the latter part of December a batch of amalgam was retorted and the tin in the retort uncovered while at a low red heat, and allowed to cool slowly to a temperature more suitable for ladling into m

    Jan 1, 1883

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - Husgafvel's Improved High Bloomary for Producing Iron and Steel Direct from Ore

    By F. Lynwood Garrison

    Except in the old Catalan forge, or its modifications, attempts to make iron and steel directly from ore in a practical and economical manner have failed so frequently and completely that such schemes

    Jan 1, 1888

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - Mining and Storing Ice

    By William P. Blake

    We are so familiar with water in its liquid and its solid form, that we seldom think of it as a mineral, and still less as a mineral product of any considerable industrial importance, though in the fo

    Jan 1, 1883

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - Modes of Occurrence of Pyrite in Bituminous Coal

    By Amos P. Brown

    PYRITE, the bisulphide of iron, FeS2, is found more or less in all coal-beds: but, as a rule, in certain definite forms. More than any other impurity, it detracts from the commercial value of a coal-d

    Jan 1, 1888

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - On the Occurrence of Gold in Williamson County, Texas

    By Charles A. Schaeffer

    IN the early part of last year I received a small amount of powdered mineral from Williamson County, Texas, to be examined for silver. The specimen proved to be limestone, slightly colored

    Jan 1, 1883

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - Remarks on an Occurrence of Tin Ore at Winslow, Maine

    By T. Sterry Hunt

    I HAVE already referred to this interesting locality in the opening address, but at the request of some of the members of the Institute, brought before them specimens of the ore and the accompanying r

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - Remarks on the Magnetites of Clifton, in St. Lawrence County, New York

    By B. Silliman

    THESE ores occur in the Laurentian rocks in the town of Clifton, St. Lawrence County, New York. The Clifton Mining Company have opened these magnetites upon their estate of 23,000 acres, on the wat

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - Some notes on Blast-Furnace Practice

    By Casimir Constable

    DURING the years 1875 to 1879 I had charge of the Rockwood furnaces and mines, situated forty miles from the nearest railway communication at that time, and one hundred miles north of Chap tanooga, Te

    Jan 1, 1883

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - Some Recent Improvements in Open-Hearth Steel Practice

    By Alfred E. Hunt

    The late Alexander Holley said, on returning from a careful study of the relative merits of the Bessemer and the open-hearth processes, as shown in the best European practice, that, in this country, t

    Jan 1, 1888

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - Spirally-Welded Tubing

    By J. C. Bayles

    It is seldom the privilege of one who contributes to the Transactions of a technical society, to describe a new industry in which, by processes employed for the first time, are attained results of con

    Jan 1, 1888

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - The Analysis of Furnace Gases

    By Magnus Troilius

    For some time I have been using with great advantage, for the purpose of determining rapidly and accurately the chemical composition of gases from Siemens producers, an apparatus arranged generally li

    Jan 1, 1883

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - The Bedded Ore-Deposits of Red Mountain Mining District, Ouray County, Colorado

    By G. E. Kedzie

    The ore-deposits of ail that portion of the San Juan country within the borders of Ouray County are either in the tertiary ernptives or, confined to a relatively narrow zone, in the sedimentary beds j

    Jan 1, 1888

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - The Blake System of Fine Crushing and its Economic Results

    By Theodore A. Blake

    At the Chicago meeting of the Institute, May, 1884,I had the pleasure of announcing the introduction of a new machine for fine crushing, or The Blake multiple-jaw crusher, which, in combina tion with

    Jan 1, 1888

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - The Bower-Barff Process

    By A. S. Bower

    Any process which has for its object the preservation of iron and steel from rust, and which will make these metals more applicable than they now are to the requirements of mankind, will be sure to me

    Jan 1, 1883

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - The Management of Structural Steel

    By Albert F. Hill

    The manufacture of structural shapes in steel of uniform quality, which shall command the full confidence of the engineer, is a problem in practical metallurgy which is beginning to attract much atten

    Jan 1, 1883

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - The Method of Collecting Flue-Dust at Erns on the Lahn

    By T. Egleston

    The importance of condensing the gases which escape from furnaces so as to save both the fine particles of ore carried off mechanically and those which are volatilized, has for a long time occupied th

    Jan 1, 1883

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - The Midlothian Colliery, Virginia (Supplementary Paper)

    By Oswald J. Heinrich

    THE origin of spontaneous combustion in collieries is, of course, chiefly due to bad system in laying out the pits, unclean workings, insufficient ventilation, and neglect in damming off works after t