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New York Paper - Primary Downward Changes in Ore Deposits (with Discussion)By W. H. Emmons
Most mineral deposits change as they are followed downward on their dips. Some of these changes are due to primary arrangement; different ores were precipitated at different depths when the deposits w
Jan 1, 1924
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New York Paper - Problems Involved in Concentration and Utilization of Domestic Low-grade Manganese Ore (with Discussion)By Edmund Newton
The steel industry of the United States has depended in the past almost wholly upon imports for its supplies of manganese. Many of the important domestic sources yield ores leaner in their natural con
Jan 1, 1920
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New York Paper - Proposed Rail-SectionsBy Robert W. Hunt
When I had the honor of presenting to the Institute at the Buffalo meeting in October, 1888 (Trans., xvii., 226), my paper on " Steel Rails and Specifications for their Manufacture," I expressed my he
Jan 1, 1889
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New York Paper - Rate of Carbon Elimination and Degree of Oxidation of tho Metal Bath in Basic Open-hearth Practice (with Discussion)By Alexander L. Field
The rate of elimination of carbon largely controls the time required to make a heat of steel by the basic open-hearth process and to an important degree determines the cost of refining. Practical expe
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New York Paper - Recent Developments in the Fine Grinding and Treatment of Witwatersrand Ores (with Discussion)By Carl R. Davis, J. L. Willey, S. E. T. Ewing
The first tube-mill on the Rand was put into operation in May. 1904, at the Glen Deep Mine. From that time onwards, tube-mills were added to various plants, although little was known regarding the cap
Jan 1, 1925
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New York Paper - Recent Improvements in Bessemer MachineryBy A. L. Holley
The members of the society are doubtless aware that the production of American Bessemer steel works is constantly increasing; that the same converters and machinery are doing more work every year. Thi
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New York Paper - Recrystallization after Plastic Deformation (Discussion, p. 589)By Henry M. Howe
This paper is a discussion of the extremely valuable one of Mathewson and Phillips, The Recrystallization of Cold-Worked Alpha Brass on Annealing,1 which not only gives us a wealth of important data r
Jan 1, 1917
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New York Paper - Redistillation of Zinc (with Discussion)By Kurt Stock
The grades of spelter demanded by the consuming industries were not definitely established until the American Society for Testing Materials undertook to fix specifications, based on the varying percen
Jan 1, 1925
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New York Paper - Reduction of Iron Ores by Carbon Monoxide (with Discussion)By Heihachi Kamura
The reduction of iron oxide, such as Fe203, to iron in the blast furnace is performed principally by carbon monoxide, but partly by solid carbon by the two following reactions: Fe2O3 + 3CO = 2Fe 4-
Jan 1, 1925
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New York Paper - Relation of Air Pressure to Drilling Speeds of Hammer Drills (with Discussion)By H. W. Seamon
The data here given were obtained by 1500 tests made by the United Verde Copper Co. to determine the most economical air pressure for the operation of hammer drills under the varying conditions of use
Jan 1, 1922
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New York Paper - Relation of Heat Treatment to the Microstructure of 60-40 BrassBy Robert S. Williams
On several occasions, when 60-40 brass is first obtained in the beta condition by quenching at about 825" C. and is then reheated, the writers have noticed that reerystallization will take place in th
Jan 1, 1924
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New York Paper - Relation of Heat Treatment, Mechanical Properties, and Microstructure of 60-40 BrassBy Victor O. Homerberg, Dexter N. Shaw
A study of the correlation of the mechanical properties and of the microstructure with the heat treatment of 60-40 brass has been confined, heretofore, to the rolled or extruded material as received f
Jan 1, 1924
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New York Paper - Relationship of Physical and Chemical Properties of Copper (with Discussion)By Frank L. Antisell
Certain physical and chemical properties of copper are so intimately related that a change in variation of the physical properties indicates a certain chemical change. The standard specifications of c
Jan 1, 1921
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New York Paper - Relative Efficiency of Amalgamation and CyanidingBy 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 - Relative Efficiency of Amalgamation and CyanidingBy 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 - Remarks on the Extraction of Bismuth from Certain OresBy T. Sterry Hunt
I HAVE lately had occasion to examine sulphuretted ores of bismuth' both from Tudor, Ontario, and Latete, New Brunswick. The former consisted chiefly of bismuth-glance, carbonated at the outcrop,
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New York Paper - Remarks on the Hunt and Douglas Copper ProcessBy T. Sterry Hunt
THE essential principle of this new process, now in operation in Chili and in North Carolina, for the extraction of copper from its ores, is the dissolving of the oxides of copper by a hot solution of
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New York Paper - Report of the Secretary of the Committee on Safety and Sanitation (with Discussion)By E. Maltby Shipp
YouR committee's secretary submits the following report, or summary, to the members of the committee, in an endeavor to lay before them a general review of the information so far received and als
Jan 1, 1918
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New York Paper - Reverberatory Smelting Practice of Nevada Consolidated Copper Co.By R. E. H. Pomeroy
The statistical data given in this paper are taken from the actual performance of the No. 2 reverberatory furnace of the Nevada Consolidated Copper Co., Mc Gill, Nev., for a period of four months, fro
Jan 1, 1915
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New York Paper - Review of Present Status of Drill Steel Breakage and Heat Treatment (with Discussion)By Henry S. Burnholz, Charles Y. Clayton, Francis B. Foley
This work was first undertaken for the U. S. Bureau of Mines, in 1919-20, by C. E. Julihn, superintendent of the station at Minneapolis. Learning of the interest, in this subject, of B. F. Tillson, of
Jan 1, 1923