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Buffalo Paper - Note on Slips and Explosions in the Blast-Furnace (Discussion, 911)
By F. B. Richards
For the last five years the furnace-men drawing their oresupply from the Lake Superior districts have had to solve the problem of using the very fine Mesabi ores as part of their oremixture. It is
Jan 1, 1899
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Buffalo Paper - Note on the Cost of Tunneling at the Melones Mine, Calaveras Co., Cal.
By W. C. Ralston
This note will give the cost of driving an adit at the Melones mine, in 1898, and, for purposes of comparison, the cost of similar work, in 1888, at the Hogsback mine, Placer county, Cal. The prope
Jan 1, 1899
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Buffalo Paper - Note on the Forms Assumed by the Charge in the Blast-Furnace, as Affected by Various Methods of Filling
By Frank Firmstone
When in charge of the Glen don Iron Works, the importance of good methods of filling was forcibly brought to my attention, and it occurred to me that the first step toward the discovery of the best pl
Jan 1, 1899
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Buffalo Paper - Notes on the Electrolytic Assay of Copper
By William Glenn
Almost beyond doubt, the most important contribution to the assaying of copper yet made, is that of Mr. Eustis (Bans., xi., 120) on the " Comparison of Various Methods of Copper Analysis," which indic
Jan 1, 1889
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Buffalo Paper - Notes on the Mines of the Frontino and Bolivia Company, Colombia, S. A. (Discussion, 908 ; see also pp. 33, 803)
By Spencer Cragoe
I have read with much interest the elaborate and able paper of Messrs. Granger and Treville on the Mining Districts of Colombia, presented at the Atlantic City Meeting (ante, p. 33). Going into det
Jan 1, 1899
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Buffalo Paper - Notes on the Operation of a Light Mineral Railroad
By James Douglas
As the operation of light railroads is important to the mining industry, the following statistics of the Arizona Southeastern Railroad may be of interest. When the traffic of the Bisbee copper-mine
Jan 1, 1899
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Buffalo Paper - Notes on the Roasting of the Hudson River Carbonates
By Ingersoll Olmsted
These ores are of two classes, Bessemer and non-Bessemer, existing in separate, though adjoining, beds. Both are carbonates, with small admixtures of oxides and other combinations. To prepare them
Jan 1, 1889
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Buffalo Paper - Notes on the Rosario Mine at San Juancito, Honduras, C. A.
By Thomas H. Leggett
The conditions surrounding this mine are, perhaps, not sufficiently rare or significant to warrant special attention. A certain interest, however, attaches to the locality through the recent discovery
Jan 1, 1889
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Buffalo Paper - Notes on Tuyeres in the Iron Blast-Furnace (Discussion, 902)
By John M. Hartman
An examination as to irregularity of wear around the nose of the Witherbee tuyeres showed a section through the nose near the top as per Fig. 1, and a section only a half-inch beyond as per Fig. 2. Th
Jan 1, 1899
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Buffalo Paper - Pig-Iron of Unusual Strength
By Fred P. Dewey
The product of the Muirkirk, Md., furnace has always enjoyed a very high reputation for strength ; and this is supported not only by its behavior in practice, both alone and in mixtures, but also by t
Jan 1, 1889
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Buffalo Paper - Soaping Geysers
By R. W. Raymond
Some months ago I heard from a party of returned tourists an amusing story of a Chinese laundryman in the National Park who had included in his cabin a hot spring, of which he was accustomed to avail
Jan 1, 1889
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Buffalo Paper - Steel Rails and Specifications for their Manufacture
By Robert W. Hunt
Having had some twenty years' experience in trying to make good Bessemer steel rails, and now devoting my thoughts and energies to seeing that other people seek the same end, I venture to lay bef
Jan 1, 1889
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Buffalo Paper - The Alluvial Deposits of Western Australia
By T. A. Rickard
The interior of West Australia is an arid table-land, elevated 1400 feet above the sea. This plateau is flanked to the south by the Tertiary limestones which fringe the Great Australian Bight. It is b
Jan 1, 1899
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Buffalo Paper - The Chlorinati6n of Low-Grade Auriferous Sulphides
By William B. Phillips
It would be hard to find a mineral region that has been more beset with " processes" for the extraction of gold from auriferous sulphides than North Carolina. And it would be hard to find a mineral re
Jan 1, 1889
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Buffalo Paper - The Effect of Sizing on the Removal of Sulphur from Coal by Washing (Discussion, 854)
By Charles C. Upham
Not long ago a few acres of coal-land in the Connellsville region of Pennsylvania were sold at the rate of $1500 per acre. While this was doubtless a " fancy " price, affected by some consideration ot
Jan 1, 1899
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Buffalo Paper - The Effect of Velocity and Tension of Gases on the Reduction of Ores in the Blast-Furnace
By Theo W. Robinson
The evolution of the modern blast-furnace from the embryonic stages of comparatively few years ago, has been the work of wide praetiee and experiment. That much is still to be desired, the experience
Jan 1, 1889
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Buffalo Paper - The Equalization of Load on Winding-Engines by the Employment of Spiral Drums
By E. M. Rogers
In hoisting from shafts of considerable depth, the dead weightdue to the accumulating length of cable is an important element, and has
Jan 1, 1889
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Buffalo Paper - The Evolution of Mine-Surveying Instruments (See, as to Discussion, Secretary's note, p. 919)
By Dunbar D. Scott
The development in the perfection of mine-surveying instruments has been by no means rapid, as it has depended somewhat on the details of construction borrowed from astronomical and geodetic theodolit
Jan 1, 1899
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Buffalo Paper - The Geology of Buffalo as Related to Natural-Gas Explorations along the Niagara River
By Charles Albert Ashburner
THE stratigraphical geology of the vicinity of Buffalo has always been of great interest on account of its bearing on the origin and history of the Niagara-river gorge, between the Falls and Lake Onta
Jan 1, 1889
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Buffalo Paper - The Glenmore Iron Estate, Greenbrier County, West Virginia
By William N. Page
HAVING recently made a careful professional examination of this tract, I think its peculiar geographical, topographical and geological relations may prove interesting to members, not only because they
Jan 1, 1889