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  • AIME
    Florida Paper - The Albion Phosphate District

    By E. T. Cox

    The Albion phosphate-district embraces a territory about 4 miles wide and 6 miles long, in a northerly and southerly direction, situated in Levy county, Florida. The Florida Central and Peninsular

    Jan 1, 1896

  • AIME
    Florida Paper - The Cyanide Process as Applied to the Concentrates from a Nova Scotia Gold- Ore

    By Richard W. Lodge

    The following work, performed by Mr. W. A. Tucker, of the class of 1893, in the mining department of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, seems to me to be worthy of publication. I believe it ha

    Jan 1, 1896

  • AIME
    Florida Paper - The Ducktown Ore-Deposits and the Treatment of the Ducktown Copper-Ores

    By Carl Henrich

    The Ducktown copper-mines are located in the southeast corner of Tennessee. The name Ducktown was originally given to a district occupying the southeast corner of Polk county, which in turn occupies t

    Jan 1, 1896

  • AIME
    Florida Paper - The Equipment of Mining and Metallurgical Laboratories

    By H. O. Hofman

    The mining and metallurgical laboratory, as we understand the term in this country, is a place .in which mechanical and chemical working-tests are made on ores, fuels and furnacematerials. It is of qu

    Jan 1, 1896

  • AIME
    Florida Paper - The Florida Pebble-Phosphates

    By E. W. Codington

    The pebble-phosphates of Florida occur in a district roughly bounded on the north by the 28th parallel, on the east by an irregular line running a few miles east of Peace river and on the west by the

    Jan 1, 1896

  • AIME
    Florida Paper - The Florida Rock-Phosphate Deposits

    By G. M. Wells

    A view of the map of Floridat shows the phosphate-deposits to lie on the western side of the State, extending southward over

    Jan 1, 1896

  • AIME
    Florida Paper - The Lixiviation of Silver-Ores by the Russell Process at Aspen, Colorado (see Discussion p. 993)

    By Willard S. Morse

    The purpose of this paper is to record the results obtained in the use of the Russell process at Aspen, Colo., covering a period of fourteen months, from November, 1891, to December, 1892, during whic

    Jan 1, 1896

  • AIME
    Florida Paper - The Nomenclature of Zinc-Ores (see Discussion p. 959)

    By Walter Renton Ingalls

    The ores of zinc which are important as sources of that metal are of two classes, viz., the sulphide and the oxidized. The latter includes six varieties: zincite (the red oxide) and franklinite (the o

    Jan 1, 1896

  • AIME
    Florida Paper - The Northeastern Bituminous Coal-Measures of the Appalachian System

    By George S. Ramsay

    The Appalachian system contains the largest area of all known Carboniferous coal-fields. Beginning near the north line dividing Pennsylvania and New York, it extends southwest through West Virginia, s

    Jan 1, 1896

  • AIME
    Florida Paper - The Present Limitations of the Cyanide Process

    By C. W. Merrill

    The cyanide process in the United States, notwithstanding numerous failures made under the direction of the owners of the patent-rights, and others, has now passed its experimeiital stage, and can, un

    Jan 1, 1896

  • AIME
    Florida Paper - The Tin-Deposits of Durango, Mexico (see Discussion p. 997)

    By Walter Renton Ingalls

    Vague references to tin-deposits in Mexico are scattered throughout technical literature, and that country has been looked to as a likely source of a part of the world's supply of till at no very

    Jan 1, 1896

  • AIME
    Florida Paper - The White Phosphates of Tennessee

    By Charles Willard Hayes

    Shortly after the discovery of black phosphate on Swan creek, in Hickman county, Tennessee, prospectors familiar with the Florida phosphate came to the region and began the search for rock similar to

    Jan 1, 1896

  • AIME
    Florida Paper - Treatment of Roasted Gold-Ores by Means of Bromine

    By Richard W. Lodge

    Mr. H. R. Batcheller, of the class of 1894, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, while experimenting with chlorine gas on a certain lot of roasted concentrates, met with the following difficulties:

    Jan 1, 1896

  • SME
    Florida Phosphate and the Environment: Practices, Problems and Emerging Technologies

    By Richard F. McFarlin

    INTRODUCTION Phosphate, one of the three major elements essential for all living plants and animals, has been mined in Florida for over a hundred years. Comprising roughly 80% of the U.S. total an

    Jan 1, 1992

  • SME
    Florida Phosphate Faces Problems And Opportunities

    By Bruce Congleton

    One year ago this month, we in Central Florida witnessed the beginning of a most exciting and glamorous attraction. After three years of construction and anticipation, Walt Disney World opened its gat

    Jan 1, 1972

  • SME
    Florida Phosphate Matrix Pump And Pipeline Operating Efficiencies

    By G. R. Addie

    While the cost of transporting raw phosphate matrix from a pit to a processing plant via slurry pipelines is more efficient than it could be by rail cars, conventional trucks or belt conveyors, it sti

    Jan 1, 1998

  • AIME
    Florida Stakes Its Claim in the Uranium Market

    By John W. Sweeney

    Florida is blessed with some of the worlds greatest phosphate rock deposits, and doubly blessed in that those deposits are uraniferous. Until recently, the uranium con¬tained in phosphate rock had bee

    Jan 9, 1979

  • AIME
    Florida State Geological Survey

    Florida State Geological Survey, Tallahassee, Fla Herman Gunter, State Geologist A list of publications will be sent upon request Citizens of the state may obtain publications available without cos

    Jan 1, 1933

  • SME
    Florida: The New Uranium Producer

    By John W. Sweeney

    Florida is usually thought of as a vacation State, not a mining State, yet Florida has been the leading producer of phosphate rock in the United States for 85 consecutive years and in 1978 supplied ov

    Jan 1, 1979

  • SME
    Flotability Evaluation Of Fine Coal

    By Weibai Hu

    Four methods to assess the relative flotability of fine coal have been tested: flotation with frother only, flotation with frother and collector, salt flotation, and timed-release analysis. A practica

    Jan 1, 1987