Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - A Blast-Furnace with Bosh Water-Jacket and Iron Top
By Arthur F. Wendt
Within the last few years the production of iron, and of the metals generally, by a given furnace-plant, has been largely increased, in many instances trebled. Iron-furnaces exceeding one hundred tons
Jan 1, 1885
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - A Combined Vacuum-Pump and Table-Blowpipe
By W. F. Durfee
The apparatus described in this paper was designed by the writer, in the year 1869, for use in the laboratory of the " American Silver Steel Works," at Bridgeport, Conn., where only the vacuum-pump wa
Jan 1, 1885
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - A Complete Gas Assaying-Plant
By Walter Lee Brown
One of the characteristic steps in the march of modern scientific progress is the substitution of improved time-saving and labor-saving appliances for the antiquated and, in most cases, inconvenient f
Jan 1, 1885
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - A Mexican Cupellation-Hearth
By W. Lawrence Austin
At the Troy meeting of the Institute, in October, 1883, I presented a paper entitled "Smelting Notes from Chihuahua, Mexico,"" in which was briefly described a cupellation-hearth, commonly met with in
Jan 1, 1885
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - A New Method of Shaft-Sinking through Water-Bearing Loose Materials
By James E. Mills
In the work of exploring certain gold-bearing gravels in the American Valley, Plumas Co., California, entrusted to my charge by Prof. A. Agassiz, of Cambridge, and Q. A. Shaw, Esq., of Boston, it beca
Jan 1, 1885
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - A new Rock-Drill without Cushion
By A. C. Rand
The invention to be described in this paper is the work of Frederic A. Halsey, Engineer for the Rand Drill Company, of New York, and its use mill abridge the notable wastefulness of power of the strik
Jan 1, 1885
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - Discussion of Mr. P. G. Salorn's Paper on "Physical and Chemical Tests of Steel for Boiler and Ship-Plate for the United States Government Cruisers,"
William Kent, New York City: I regret that I have not had the time since the Cincinnati meeting to make as complete a study of Mr. Salom's paper as I wished. I regard it as one of the most import
Jan 1, 1885
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - Hadfield's Patent Manganese Steel
By Joseph D. Weeks
Manganese has, until recently, been most highly esteemed as a good thing to keep out of steel. Its value in the process of mannfacture has been fully recognized, but after it has played its part in th
Jan 1, 1885
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - Note on Patching Platinum Crucibles
By H. J. Seaman
The cost of keeping platinum ware in repair becomes such an important item in laboratories where much fusion-work is done, that a method of saving in this direction may not prove unacceptable to at le
Jan 1, 1885
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - Note on Tantalite and other Minerals, Accompanying the Tin Ore in the Black Hills
By Charles A. Schffer
Several months ago, some specimens of the minerals occurring at the Etta tin mine, Dakota, were received at the laboratory of the Cornell University. On examining the heavy brownish-black portion, whi
Jan 1, 1885
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - Notes on Coal-Dust in Colliery Explosions
By E. S. Hutchinson
The subject of the influence of coal-dust in mine-explosions has received considerable attention both in England and on the continent of Europe, but until the recent disaster at Pocahontas, Va., it se
Jan 1, 1885
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - Recent Improvements in Copper-Smelting
By Frederick H. McDowell
Notwithstanding the rapidly increasing use of copper, due to the extension of its applications within the last few years, the fact of its continued steady decline in price stands prominently forward.
Jan 1, 1885
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - Rolling Steel Ingots with their own Initial Heat
By John Gjers
Being on a visit to your great and prosperous country, and having been favored with an invitation to attend this meeting of your Institute, the author has been requested by your Secretary to give a sh
Jan 1, 1885
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - Russell's Improved Process for the Lixiviation of Silver-Ores
By C. A. Stetefeldt
FoR the convenience of those who do not care to enter into the details of this long essay, I begin with a summary of the most important results it presents. The extraction of silver by the lixiviat
Jan 1, 1885
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - The Blake System of Fine Crushing
By Theodore A. Blake
More than a quarter of a century has passed since the introduction of the machine known as the Blake crusher, the invention of Eli W. Blake, of New Haven, Conn. Although originally designed for bre
Jan 1, 1885
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - The Cauca Mining District, U.S. of Colombia. S.A.
By John Hays Hammond
The following notes are descriptive of a country as yet in its infancy as regards the advancement made in mining operations. Its inaccessibility and other militating circumstances have retarded progre
Jan 1, 1885
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - The Cerro de Mercado (Iron Mountain) at Durango, Mexico.
By John Birkinbine
Among the notable deposits of iron-ore, the Iron Mountain at Durango, Mexico, is prominent. But, although it has been noticed in records of travel and official reports for three centuries, the stateme
Jan 1, 1885
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - The Concentration of Iron-Ores
By Arthur F. Wendt
In the manufacture of charcoal-blooms, washing or cleansing of the ore from adhering gangue has been practiced for many years. A sluice-box is even to-day used for that purpose in the Southern Appalac
Jan 1, 1885
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - The Estimation of Phosphorus in Iron and Steel
By Byron W. Cheever
While engaged in experimenting with the usual methods for estimating phosphorus in iron and steel, it occurred to me that potassium chlorate might be used to oxidize the carbon, and thus avoid the ted
Jan 1, 1885
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - The Hydraulic Cement Works of the Utica Cement Company, La Salle, Ill
By Henry C. Freeman
During the early period of the construction of the Illinois and Michigan Canal, about 1838, in excavating for the canal, where the present town of Utica stands, hydraulic limestone was discovered, and
Jan 1, 1885