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  • AIME
    Some Things That Influence the Production of Carbonic Acid in the Blast-Furnace

    By Charles Himrod

    IN presenting this paper it is not intended to enter into any discussion of the theory of the blast-furnace, but simply to give the results of a number of determinations of CO and CO2 in furnace gases

    Jan 1, 1877

  • AIME
    Endurance of Iron Rails

    By W. E. C. Coxe

    IN 1857 the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Company, whose main line extended from Philadelphia to Pottsville, Pennsylvania, with branches into the coal regions of Schuylkill County, made a contract

    Jan 1, 1877

  • AIME
    Note upon Methods of Drawing Metric and other Scales upon Engineering Plans

    By P. Barnes

    IF it be admitted that the use of the metric system of measurement is desirable, and that it will be well, as urged by one of our engineering societies, to show upon all our plans or drawings a metric

    Jan 1, 1877

  • AIME
    Technical Education

    By Lewis M. Haupt

    IT has given me great pleasure to read, in the papers recently published by this Society, the discussions on the subject of Technical Education, which were developed at the joint meeting held at the F

    Jan 1, 1877

  • AIME
    Report of the Committee on Railway Resistances

    To the American Institute of Mining Engineers: The committee appointed at the February meeting upon Railway Resistances would respectfully report: That one person has been constantly employed in

    Jan 1, 1876

  • AIME
    Some Pressing Needs of our Iron and Steel Manufactures.*

    By A. L. Holley

    IT has been customary at our opening sessions, for the presiding officer to address you on the general development of one or another of our several professions, or upon some important feature of Minin

    Jan 1, 1876

  • AIME
    Industrial Researches upon Heat and Combustion

    By P. H. Dudley

    I HAVE taken the liberty of calling the researches herein mentioned industrial, to distinguish them from those strictly scientific, where every known appliance is used to insure accuracy in determinin

    Jan 1, 1876

  • AIME
    Blast-Furnace Statistics

    By John A. Church

    IN the year 1874, when the price of pig-iron was still high, that staple product became the subject of discussion in the newspapers and among those philosophers who are determined to know the "reason

    Jan 1, 1876

  • AIME
    Description of a Double Muffle Furnace. Designed for the Reduction of Hydrous Silicates Containing Copper, Etc., Like The So-Called "Clay Ore" Of Jones's Mine In Pennsylvania

    By B. Prof. Silliman

    THE experiments detailed by Dr. Hunt,* having demonstrated the fact that the copper contained in the "clay ore" of Jones's Mine, was rendered completely soluble in the bath of ferrous chloride, u

    Jan 1, 1876

  • AIME
    The Cedar Point Iron Company's Furnace, No. 1 At Port Henry, Essex County, N. Y.

    By T. F. Witherbee

    IT is proposed to give, first, a description of the works ; second, a report of the first six months of the present blast; and third, such improvements as have been suggested by the practical working.

    Jan 1, 1876

  • IOM3
    Notes on a visit to coal and iron mines and ironworks in the United States

    By I. L. Bell

    The ironmasters of America had asked the Iron and Steel Institute to visit the USA. The Council decided it was not possible to accept, but Mr. Bell visited; this is an account of his trip. Topics cove

    Jan 12, 1875

  • AIME
    Economy Of Fuel In Our Anthracite Blast¬ Furnaces

    By B. W. Frazier

    IN the numbers of the Engineering and Mining Journal of June 27th and July 11th, 1874, there appeared some very complete statistics of the working of some anthracite blast-furnaces belonging to a larg

    Jan 1, 1875

  • AIME
    Provision for the Health and Comfort of Miners.-Miners' Homes

    By William P. Prof. Blake

    WHEN we consider the efforts made in Europe to promote the physical and moral well-being of the working classes, the question is suggested whether in this country, where, theoretically, every man is p

    Jan 1, 1875

  • AIME
    The Ore Of Iron; Their Geographical Distribution and Relation to the Great Centres of the World's Iron Industries

    By Henry Newton

    IT may seem somewhat a work of supererogation to present to the American Institute of Mining Engineers, composed largely of gentle- men with whom the subject is so familiar, a paper on iron ores and t

    Jan 1, 1875

  • AIME
    Economical Results of Smelting in Utah

    By Ellsworth Daggett

    THE ore smelted in the Winnamuck furnace during the year 1872 consisted, for the most part, of oxidized ores from the Winnamuck mine, only sixty tons of outside ore (from the Spanish mine) having been

    Jan 1, 1874

  • AIME
    Experiments at the Lucy Furnace

    By E. C. Pechin

    THE Lucy furnace, owned by Messrs. Carnegie, Kloman & Co., and located on the Alleghany River, on the outskirts of Pittsburgh, is a splendid modern furnace, 75 feet high, and 20 feet bosh. She had bee

    Jan 1, 1874

  • AIME
    The Diamond Drill for Deep Boring, Compared With Other Systems of Boring

    By Oswald J. Heinrich

    THE great improvements which have been made in late years in the different systems and instruments used to perforate the crust of the earth for purposes of testing and exploring for mineral resources

    Jan 1, 1874

  • AIME
    What is the Best System for Working Thick Coal Seams?

    By Oswald J. Heinrich

    THIS question having been repeatedly raised, and particularly revived in a discussion at the last meeting of the Institute, I beg to submit the following remarks, based partly upon personal experience

    Jan 1, 1874

  • AIME
    Supplementary Note on the Geology of the North Shore of Lake Superior

    By T. Sterry Hunt

    IN my address on the " Geognostical Relations of the Metals," delivered before the Institute on the 20th of February last (Vol. I Transactions, p. 331), I spoke of the rocks in the vicinity of Thunder

    Jan 1, 1874

  • AIME
    The Mount Lincoln Smelting Works, At Dudley, Colorado

    By Edward D. Peters

    IT frequently occurs in the establishment of reduction works, in an entirely new and untried mining district, that the metallurgist in charge finds considerable difficulty in determining the process b

    Jan 1, 1874