Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
New York Paper - The Schumacher Briquetting ProcessBy Joseph W. Richards
This method of briquetting flue-dust, or flue-dust mixed with fine ores, or, in a few exceptional cases, coke-dust, has come into large commercial use in Europe, and a small plant is already in operat
Jan 1, 1913
-
The Wyandotte Silver Smelting and Refining WorksBy W. M. Courtis
SINCE many accounts of Silver Islet Mine, in Lake Superior, have already been published, it is supposed that the members of the Institute are familiar with the location and character of the mine. To m
Jan 1, 1874
-
New Haven Paper - The Laws of FissuresBy Blamey Stevens
The object of this paper is to present a theory of the formation of fissures, which seems to be supported by all available data. The investigation is, in the main, an exact one, and irregularities of
Jan 1, 1910
-
Position of Silver after the Pittman ActBy Cornelius Kelley
THE American producers of silver are keenly alive to the importance of the silver problem and its vital effect on the mining industry in Montana and other States where precious-metal mining constitute
Jan 2, 1923
-
Development Of The Kennecott Converter Smelting ProcessBy D. A. Kinneberg, J. W. Donaldson, N. J. Themelis
In the Kennecott Converter Smelting process (KCS), copper concentrate pellets are smelted and converted to high-grade matte in a modified Peirce-Smith converter using oxygen-enriched air and fuel. A h
Jan 1, 1976
-
Tests On The Hardinge Conical Mill? DiscussionJOHN W. BELL, *Montreal, Quebec, Canada (communication to the Secretary?). The test results in Mr. Taggart's paper will, I am sure, be recognized as a notable contribution, and of great assistanc
Jan 8, 1917
-
The Design and Analysis of Flotation ExperimentsBy W. A. Griffith
The fundamental principles and modern techniques of experimental planning and data analysis, applicable to any type of research, are particularly important in flotation experimentation. Since they con
Jan 1, 1962
-
Chloridizing Mill of the Standard Reduction Co.By H. P. Allen
THE chloridizing mill of the Standard Reduction Co. is located about 75 miles south of Salt Lake City on the Tintic branch of the Denver & Rio Grande Western R. R. and 12 miles from the Tintic Standar
Jan 8, 1925
-
Escondida: A Project Financing For The 1990sBy D. W. Loughridge
INTRODUCTION Raising capital in the 1990s is a timely subject. However, many of us thought why should raising capital in the 1990s prove to be unlike it was in the 19805, the 1970s, the 1%0s, or ea
Jan 1, 1990
-
Development Of The Dwight-Lloyd Sintering ProcessBy H. E. Rowen
As high grade iron ore deposits dwindle and costs rise, sintering becomes more and more important. The steel industry is now faced with beneficiation problems once peculiar to nonferrous work. Succeed
Jan 1, 1961
-
On the Importance of Surveying in GeologyBy Benjamin Smith Lyman
THE importance of topography to geology is so commonly underrated as to deserve to be pointed out again and again. The relation of topography to the different branches of geology may be seen best by a
Jan 1, 1873
-
Glen Summit Paper - The Bendigo Gold-FieldBy T. A. Rickard
Among the names which won a world-wide fame during the golden age of the early fifties, Bendigo and Ballarat were to Australia, what the Yuba and Grass Valley were to California. The map of Victoria d
Jan 1, 1892
-
Chicago Paper - The Spitzkasten and Settling-TankBy R. H. Richards, C. E. Locke
In "Sorting Before Sizing " (a paper first announced at the Pittsburgh meeting, February, 1896, but delayed in preparation and now presented at the present meeting) it is shown that if slime-tables ar
Jan 1, 1898
-
Montreal (Annual) Paper - The Cause of FaultingBy John A. Church
In a recent paper read before the Institute it was said of faults that "the sensible expression of the fracture is an earthquake." This notion, which has been expressed before, though usually as a the
Jan 1, 1893
-
Cleveland Paper - The Ultimate Source of MetalsBy Blamey Stevens
It is now generally agreed that most metals have been brought to the surface of the earth by volcanic agencies. The question as to how these metals came from the volcanic matrix to the mineral deposit
Jan 1, 1913
-
The Hydro-Electrolytic Treatment Of Copper Ores*By Robert Goodrich
EXPERIMENTS ON A PORPHYRY COPPER ORE FROM BISBEE, ARIZ. THIS research was done partly in the non-ferrous laboratory of the Department of Metallurgy of Columbia University, under the direction of Dr.
Jan 8, 1915
-
Cleveland Paper - The Mount Morgan Mine, QueenslandBy T. A. Rickard
Among the gold-deposits discovered in recent vears none is more extraordinary in richness or interesting in structure than that of the famous mine at Mount Morgan. At a time when but few Australian mi
Jan 1, 1892
-
Safeguarding The Use Of Electricity In MinesBy H. H. Clark
ELECTRICITY must be safeguarded everywhere that it is used. The conditions that exist underground make the use of safeguards more essential there than almost anywhere else. Electric Shock Electric s
Jan 4, 1914
-
The Claiborne Group and its Remarkable FossilsBy P. H. Mell
THE little village, from which this formation receives its name, is situated on a bluff of the Alabama River, 175 feet above water level. This bluff is a portion of high table land that begins in the
Jan 1, 1880
-
Oil-Field Waters Of The Bradford PoolBy Paul Torrey
THE Northwestern Pennsylvania Oil Producers Association and the United States Geological Survey have cooperated in conducting a pre-liminary study of the character of the flood waters, the relationshi
Jan 1, 1927