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  • AIME
    Scranton Paper - Microscopic Structure of Steel Rails

    By F. Lynwood Garrison

    The enormous growth of the manufacture of Bessemer steel in this country within the last few years, due to the almost constant large demand for steel rails, renders it very desirable that our knowledg

    Jan 1, 1887

  • AIME
    Scranton Paper - Mining Developments on the North-western Pacific Coast and their Wider Bearing

    By Amos Bowman

    In the last two years I have had an opportunity to study the conditions of gold-mining in the far northwest of the Pacific coast —in Cariboo district, British Columbia. That country joins Alaska

    Jan 1, 1887

  • AIME
    Scranton Paper - Note on the Formatior1 of Coal from Mine-Timber

    By E. S. Moffat

    Members of the Institute who have visited the works of the Lackawanna Iron and Coal Company at Scranton, will remember the exposure of a large vein of anthracite coal in the rocky bank on the south si

    Jan 1, 1887

  • AIME
    Scranton Paper - Note on the New Geological Map of Europe

    By Persifor Frazer

    During the Centennial year some of our leading geologists in the United States and Canada conceived the happy thought of calling an International Congress of Geologists for the purpose of agreeing upo

    Jan 1, 1887

  • AIME
    Scranton Paper - Notes on the General Treatment of the Southern Gold-Ores and Experiments in Matting Sulphides

    By E. Gybbon Spilsbury

    Everybody who has had his attention turned to the gold-deposits of the Southern States, is acquainted with the undisputed fact of the existence, at least in the Carolinas and Georgia, of enormous area

    Jan 1, 1887

  • AIME
    Scranton Paper - Notes on the Saving of Sulphur and Ammonia from Gas

    By W. H. Adams

    During the years when Americans were most active in investigations of the many substances containing nitrogen or ammonia, viz.: 1869 to 1875, my connection with certain chemical industries led me to e

    Jan 1, 1887

  • AIME
    Scranton Paper - Rail-Sections

    By W. F. Mattes

    The manufacture of steel rails in the United States upon a large scale may be roughly dated from the years 1875-76, and the same years witnessed an active movement among the railroads toward the adopt

    Jan 1, 1887

  • AIME
    Scranton Paper - Roasting-Kiln at the Musconetcong Iron-Works, N. J.

    By I. P. Pardee

    In our mixture at Musconetcong Iron Works we have an exceedingly hard, dense, magnetic ore, which contains some iron pyrites. The sulphur runs from 0.5 to 1.5 per cent. To prepare this ore better for

    Jan 1, 1887

  • AIME
    Scranton Paper - The Animikie Rocks and their Vein-Phenomena, as Shown at Duncan Mine, Lake Superior

    By W. M. Courtis

    In compliance with the suggestion in Mr. Emmons's paper on the Genesis of Certain Ore-Deposits (Trans. xv., 125), that facts should be accumulated for study and future compilation, I wish to put

    Jan 1, 1887

  • AIME
    Scranton Paper - The Distribution and Proportions of American Blast-Furnaces. (Second Paper.)

    By John Birkinbine

    The following data concerning the general dimensions and district-location of the blast-furnaces of the United States are intended to supplement a paper of similar title, which appears in volume xiv.,

    Jan 1, 1887

  • AIME
    Scranton Paper - The Geologic Relations of the Nanticoke Disaster

    By Charles A. Ashburner

    One of the most unexpected and unusual mining disasters which have ever been recorded in the Pennsylvania anthracite region, or, in fact, in any coal-mining district, occurred in the northern anthraci

    Jan 1, 1887

  • AIME
    Scranton Paper - The Silver Mines of Calico, California

    By Waldermar Lindgren

    [The observations here presented were made during a short visit at Calico, in December, 1886. The accompanying map, which does not claim to be more than a careful sketch, is based on the position of a

    Jan 1, 1887

  • AIME
    Scranton Paper - The Use of Natural Gas in a Lead Blast-Furnace

    By Francis C. Blake

    Although the use of gaseous fuel in blast-furnaces has been often proposed, I hope the description of a very simple, yet practical and valuable, application of natural gas to the smelting of lead-ores

    Jan 1, 1887

  • AIME
    Scrap Metals From Ordnance

    By Lowell S. Thomas

    I have been asked to speak to you on the subject of "Scrap Metals from the Army." With your kind permission I'd like to change this subject to "Scrap Metals from Ordnance," as the Property and S

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Scrap Recovery Campaign in Michigan Iron and Copper Country a Model

    By AIME AIME

    OUT of the fabulous iron ranges of Michigan?s Upper Peninsula since Pearl Harbor have come go to the steel mills to become tanks, guns, ships, and other weapons for a United Nations' victory. But

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Scrapers-A Prime Mover for Mining Kaolin in Georgia

    Kaolin deposits in Georgia lie in a belt that stretches across the central part of the state from Alabama to South Carolina. In 1977 the state's kaolin production was an estimated 4.58 million to

    Jan 6, 1978

  • AIME
    Scraping at the Park Utah Mine

    By Cushwa, C. C.

    AT the Park Utah Mine, labor costs of stoping A have been reduced from 30 to 40 per cent. by the use of double-drum hoists and scrapers. The application of scrapers varies with the methods of timberin

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    Scratch And Brinell Hardness Of Severely Cold-Rolled Metals

    By M. F. Fogler

    An attempt to duplicate Rawdon and Mutchler's experiments showing a reversal of hardness with continued rolling gave negative results, indicating that the phenomenon is not general but depends, p

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    Screened Ore Used For Fine Grinding At Lake Shore Mines

    By Bunting S. Crocker

    PEBBLE grinding at Lake Shore is not a temporary wartime substitute. The tube milling plant, with a 1000 ton per day capacity, grinds a hard siliceous ore to 90 pct - 325 mesh. The plant, prior to usi

    Jan 1, 1952

  • AIME
    Screening

    By John S. Johnson, Thomas Fraser

    SIZING is the process of separating mixed particles into groups of particles all of the same size, or into groups in which all particles L range between certain definite maximum and minimum sizes. In

    Jan 1, 1943