Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
New York Paper - Calculating the Zinc for Desilverizing Lead Bullion by the Parkes Process (with Discussion)
By George G. Griswold
The Parkes process of lead refining is based on the fact that when zinc isemixed with molten lead bullion, it forms an alloy with the silver and gold. This alloy freezes at a higher temperature and is
Jan 1, 1924
-
New York Paper - Calculation of Mine-Values
By R. B. Brinsmade
The following is an attempt to form a formula by which a mine can be quickly evaluated, aft,er all pertinent physical data have been collected from observations on the ground by a competent mining eng
Jan 1, 1909
-
New York Paper - Calculation of Ore Tonnage and Grade from Drill-hole Samples (with Discussion)
By James E. Harding
The usual method of sampling mineral deposits is to drill holes and assay the sludge or core. Though the results thus obtained may not represent the true average value of the deposit, it is on these r
Jan 1, 1922
-
New York Paper - Calculations with Reference to Use of Carbon in Modern American Blast Furnaces (with Discussion)
By Henry Phelps Howland
During the last decade no topic has created more interest or received more thought among blast-furnace men than coke. One reason for this is, undoubtedly, the remarkable increase in the use of bypr
Jan 1, 1917
-
New York Paper - Can Anthracite Mines be Operated Profitably on More than One Shift? (with Discussion)
By Dever C. Ashmead
FRom time to time metal-mine engineers have inquired why anthracitc mines and their preparators are rarely operated on the two or three-shift basis. The subject may be approached as affecting: labor,
Jan 1, 1923
-
New York Paper - Can Anthracite Mines be Operated Profitably on More than One Shift? (with Discussion)
By Dever C. Ashmead
FRom time to time metal-mine engineers have inquired why anthracitc mines and their preparators are rarely operated on the two or three-shift basis. The subject may be approached as affecting: labor,
Jan 1, 1923
-
New York Paper - Canadian Oil Reserves
By Walter A. English, Ralph Arnold
Though production began in Canada only a short time after the discovery of oil in the United States, it has never attained large proportions, and if we were to judge entirely by the past the reserves
Jan 1, 1923
-
New York Paper - Canadian Oil Reserves
By Walter A. English, Ralph Arnold
Though production began in Canada only a short time after the discovery of oil in the United States, it has never attained large proportions, and if we were to judge entirely by the past the reserves
Jan 1, 1923
-
New York Paper - Cannel Coal and Carbonaceous Shale Deposits of Pennsylvania (with Discussion)
By Charles R. Fettke
BefoRe the Drake well on Watson Flats below Titusville, Pa, inaugurated the modern petroleum industry on Aug. 28, 1859, a considerable industry, based on the manufacture of mineral oils through the de
Jan 1, 1923
-
New York Paper - Cannel Coal and Carbonaceous Shale Deposits of Pennsylvania (with Discussion)
By Charles R. Fettke
BefoRe the Drake well on Watson Flats below Titusville, Pa, inaugurated the modern petroleum industry on Aug. 28, 1859, a considerable industry, based on the manufacture of mineral oils through the de
Jan 1, 1923
-
New York Paper - Carbon Ratios of Coals in West Virginia Oil Fields (with Discussion)
By David B. Reger
The value of carbon ratios in determining the boundaries of possible oil deposits appears to have passed the hypothetical stage. The theory that the ratio of fixed carbon in pure coals is an invariabl
Jan 1, 1921
-
New York Paper - Cement Plugging for Exclusion of Bottom Water in the Augusta Field, Kansas (with Discussion)
By H. R. Shidel
This paper summarizes the results obtained from the preliminary cementing of wells in an effort to cut off the bottom water. The object of this work was two-fold: (1) To prevent the oil sand from b
Jan 1, 1920
-
New York Paper - Cementing Oil and Gas Wells (with Discussion)
By I. N. Knapp
I Herewith present some notes on the use of Portland cement to cement in the casing, and for plugging, to exclude water from oil and gas wells, and the methods employed. I have used my best efforts to
Jan 1, 1915
-
New York Paper - Certain Mechanical Changes in Bessemer Steel at the Königin-Marien-Hütte, near Zwickau, Saxony
By Archiblad MacMartin
The Kunigin-Marien-Hiitte is the only works in Germany where the Bessemer process is carried on by the direct method. The Besserner plant there, is arranged after the true English type, and the only r
-
New York Paper - Certain Ore Deposits of the Southwest (with Discussion)
By W. Tovote
This paper is based upon 12 years' experience in the Southwest, including three years that were spent in constant traveling as examining engineer for the Phelps-Dodge Corporation. The material wa
Jan 1, 1920
-
New York Paper - Character of Title that should be Granted by Government
By George W. Riter
OUR mineral-land laws need revising so as to provide definite title at the outset to the mineral deposits within any definite piece of land. The laws as they now stand, especially those applicable to
Jan 1, 1915
-
New York Paper - Charcoal and Coke as Blast-Furnace Fuels
By R. H. Sweetser
There are so many conditions affecting blast-furnace results that it is hard to get satisfactory comparative data on the working of two furnaces, and much more difficult to get comparable results from
Jan 1, 1909
-
New York Paper - Chart showing the Production of Anthracite Coal in the Lehigh, Schuylkill, and Wyoming Regions; Anthracite, Bituminous, and Charcoal Pig Iron in the United States, and Petroleum in Pennsylvania, from 1820 to 1876
By John Henry Harden
It appears that in the earlier days of anthracite coal mining, 1824-25, the Lehigh region mined 76 per cent. of all the coal sent to market. During the same period Wyoming sent 12 and 5 per cent. resp
-
New York Paper - Chemical Equilibria During Solidification and Cooling of White Cast Iron (with Discussion)
By Anne Nicholson Hird, H. A. Schwartz
Of the outstanding investigators of the system iron-carbon-silicon Gontermann,1 Charpy and Cornu-Thenard,= and Honda,3 only the first touched on the chemical composition of the solid and liquid phases
Jan 1, 1925
-
New York Paper - Chemical Equilibrium between Iron, Carbon, and Oxygen (with Discussion)
By A. Matsubara
Jan 1, 1922