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  • AIME
    Philadelphia Paper - The Whitwell Firebrick Hot-blast Stove, and its hut Improvements

    By F. W. Gordon

    The Whitwell firebrick hot-blast stove, for furnace use, may be seen in its three main stages of development in the accompnying drawings. Fig. 1 is the stove of 1869, the year in which it was thorough

    Jan 1, 1881

  • AIME
    Philadelphia Paper - Tin Fusible Boiler-plug Manufacture and Testing (with Discussion)

    By J. S. Hromatko, L. J. Gurevich

    In the course of the examination, at the BureLu of Standards, of fusible tin boiler plugs for the Steamboat Inspection Service, it became evident that an investigation should be undcrtaken to determin

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - A Century of Mining and Metallurgy in the United States

    By Hon. Abrams S. Hewitt

    Gentlemen : If my first words were other than those of thanks for the high honor of being called to preside over the American Institute of Mining Engineers, I should do injustice alike to you and to m

  • AIME
    Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - A History of the Bessemer Manufacture in America

    By Robert W. Hunt

    The memorable features of American history have been making fast during the last century, and notably so since 1860; and they are by no means confined to political or to any one branch of scientific d

  • AIME
    Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - A Study of the Igneous Rocks

    By Persifor Frazer

    I DESIRE to say that, owing to the number of papers which have been more or less crowded at this session of the Institute, and the fact that, as one of the Local Committee, I have the distinguished ho

  • AIME
    Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - A Study of the Specular and Magnetic Iron Ores of the New Red Sandstone in York County, Pa

    By Persifor Frazer

    In his " Final Report," Vol. 11, part second, p. 763, Prof. Rogers sums up the metalliferous veins of the mesozoic sandstone by remarking that these are not associated with dykes or trap-rock, but are

  • AIME
    Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - An Account of an Explosion of Fire-damp at the Midlothian Colliery, Chesterfield County, Virginia

    By Oswald J. Heinrich

    The responsibility resting upon the owners and managers of mines where fire-damp is generated, renders it a matter of imperative duty that a frill and correct statement of any explosion that occurs sh

  • AIME
    Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - An Analysis of a Specimen of Silver-gray or Glazy Iron

    By Edward Hart

    The specimen of glazy iron used for analysis was highly characteristic in appearance. It was made at one of the furnaces of the Glendon Iron Works, working a light burden of ore with a highly siliciou

  • AIME
    Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - Boracic Acid in Lake Superior Iron Ores

    By T. Egleston

    During the last winter we have been actively engaged in the School of Mines in search for boracic acid. This has been owing to the fact that Mr. M. W. Iles, assistant in the qualitative laboratory, ha

  • AIME
    Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - Cost and Results of Geological Explorations with the Diamond Drill in the Anthracite Regions of Pennsylvania

    By Lewis A. Riley

    I desire to submit, for the consideration and information of the members of the Institute, the following data, drawings, and tables, showing what I believe will be interesting information with regard

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - Endurance of Iron Rails

    By W. E. 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 Schuylliill County, made a contrac

  • AIME
    Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - Note on the Manufacture of Forged Iron Wheels. Arbel's Process

    By Adolph Henry

    The manufacture of wheels of metal for locomotives and cars constitutes an important branch of the iron industry, and one closely related, moreover, to many of the conditions of railway practice, such

  • AIME
    Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - On the Hot Blast, with an Explanation of its Mode of Action in Iron Furnaces of Different Capacities

    By I. Lowthian Bell

    THERE has been probably no improvement introduced into the manufacture of iron which created more surprise in the minds of practical smelters and of scientific men than Neilson's discovery of the

  • AIME
    Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - Partial Reconstruction of a Furnace Crucible while in Blast

    By J. H. Bramwell

    The following experience in rebuilding a furnace crucible while in blast may not be wholly uninteresting to some, notwithstanding its purely practical character. Few are aware of the frequent calls ma

  • AIME
    Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - Some Points in the Treatment of Lead Ores in Missouri

    By Charles P. Williams

    The lead-bearing area of Missouri has been subdivided, geographically, into the Southeastern, the Central, and the Southwestern

  • AIME
    Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - 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 CO 2 in furnace gase

  • AIME
    Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - The Composition of Flue Deposit

    By J. Blodget Britton

    During the last three or four years I have had occasion to examine, chemically, various samples of matter commonly called flue-dust or cinder, found deposited in the flues and hot-blast chambers and u

  • AIME
    Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - The Hematite Ore Mines and Blast Furnaces East of the Hudson River

    By James F. Lewis

    The hematite iron ore mines east of the Hudson River are confined to a strip of country ten to fifteen miles wide, commencing on the south, near Fishkill, running northeast through Dutchess County, an

  • AIME
    Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - The Kind-Chaudron Process for Sinking and Tubbing Mining Shafts

    By Julien Deby

    The sinking of a deep shaft is always a serious undertaking, especially when the strata to be traversed are of great hardness, or when they are feebly coherent or highly saturated with water. In th