Seventy-Five Years Of Progress In Mineral Production - The Statistical Record

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Elmer W. Pehrson
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
18
File Size:
564 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1947

Abstract

THE founding of the American Institute of Mining Engineers in 1871 came at an unusually significant moment in the life of our country. The industrial revolution, in which mineral production played a major role, was just getting underway. The iron industry, established several decades earlier, was reaching sizable proportions. In 1871 pig-iron production was approaching 2 million tons, and the industry had spread as far west as Missouri and Wisconsin. The chief sources of iron ore were Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, and Michigan. The age of steel was in its infancy; production had not yet reached 100,000 tons per annum. The gold rush to California two decades earlier and the discovery of other gold and silver bonanzas in the West paved the way for the transcontinental railways, which were then being built and which contributed much to the subsequent development of the great copper, lead, and zinc districts of the Rocky Mountain area. Regular production of copper in the Michigan peninsula and of lead in Missouri and the upper Mississippi region had been established for many years but on a scale dwarfed by the quantities later required as technical progress, invention and enterprise made possible the rapid expansion of industry. Discovery of oil in Pennsylvania in 1859, the growing recognition of the
Citation

APA: Elmer W. Pehrson  (1947)  Seventy-Five Years Of Progress In Mineral Production - The Statistical Record

MLA: Elmer W. Pehrson Seventy-Five Years Of Progress In Mineral Production - The Statistical Record. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1947.

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