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  • AIME
    Lake Superior Paper - The Fullers' Earth of South Dakota

    By Heinrich Ries

    Fullers' earth is a clay-like substance, which has the property of decolorizing or clarifying oils. An ultimate chemical analysis shows it to differ from most ordinary clays in having usually a h

    Jan 1, 1898

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Lake Superior Paper - The Genesis of the Diamond

    By Gardner F. Williams

    Chemically, the diamond is composed of the element carbon in its pure crystallized state. The diamond crystallizes in the isometric system, and the most common forms are the octahedron and dodecahedro

    Jan 1, 1905

  • AIME
    Lake Superior Paper - The Geology of the Treadwell Ore-Deposits, Douglas Island, Alaska

    By Arthur C. Spencer

    The object of the following paper is a description of the Treadwell gold-deposits in their geological aspects. quite apart from any consideration of the economical methods of mining and milling which

    Jan 1, 1905

  • AIME
    Lake Superior Paper - The Gold-Mines of the San Pedro District, Cerro de San Pedro, State of San Luis Potosi, Mexico

    By George A. Laird

    THIs old and once famous district played, through its enormous production of silver and gold, an important part in the history of the State of San Luis Potosi. According to a pamphlet prepared under t

    Jan 1, 1905

  • AIME
    Lake Superior Paper - The Influence of Carbon, Phosphorus, Manganese and Sulphur on the Tensile Strength of Open-Hearth Steel (Discussion, p. 1043)

    By H. H. Campbell

    Many attempts have been made to write a formula by which to calculate the strength of steel from its chemical composition, but most of these endeavors have failed because there were too many disturbin

    Jan 1, 1905

  • AIME
    Lake Superior Paper - The Influence of Lead on Rolled and Drawn Brass (Discussion, 977)

    By Edwin S. Sperry

    Metals differ widely in their behavior under the cuttingtool. Some, like iron or steel, require a slow speed and light feed, a tool shaped differently from that used for other metals,

    Jan 1, 1898

  • AIME
    Lake Superior Paper - The Investigation of Alaska's Mineral Wealth

    By Alfred H. Brooks

    The developments of the past five years have shown that Alaska, as a field for mining, stands in the first rank among the possessions of the United States. Its annual gold output is now about $8,000,0

    Jan 1, 1905

  • AIME
    Lake Superior Paper - The Iron-Ore Supply

    By John Birkinbine

    Forty years ago, when the first shipments of iron-ore were made from the Lake Superior region, the supply for the blastfurnaces active at that date was in most cases a local consideration ; the majori

    Jan 1, 1898

  • AIME
    Lake Superior Paper - The Manufacture of Coke in Peru

    By J. Morgan Clements

    The manufacture of coke in Peru, as practiced at the coalmines of the Quishuarcancha and Goyllarisquisca districts, is intermediate between the primitive coke-heap and the bee-hive oven. The method

    Jan 1, 1905

  • AIME
    Lake Superior Paper - The Marquette Range - Its Discovery, Development and Resources

    By James E. Jopling

    The county of Marquette, Michigan, includes nearly all the iron-mines that have been worked on the Marquette range, which stretches in a generally western direction from the mines at Negaunee, 10 mile

    Jan 1, 1898

  • AIME
    Lake Superior Paper - The Michigan College of Mines

    By M. E. Wadsworth

    The Michigan State College of Mines was established ten years ago last September as the fourth and last of the iustitutions of Michigan which are devoted to higher education. From the moment of its in

    Jan 1, 1898

  • AIME
    Lake Superior Paper - The Occurrence of Pebbles, Concretions and Conglomerate in Metalliferous Veins

    By Edward Halse

    The occasional occurrence in metalliferous veins of rounded fragments of rock, matrix or ore, lying loose, embedded in clay, or enclosed in some kind of cement, may be attributed to four causes:— I.

    Jan 1, 1906

  • AIME
    Lake Superior Paper - The Origin and Mode of Occurrence of the Lake Superior Copper Deposits

    By M. E. Wadsworth

    The region about the south shore of Lake Superior is to geologists one of the most interesting districts of the United States, embracing as it does, in a limited area, old crystalline rocks, together

    Jan 1, 1898

  • AIME
    Lake Superior Paper - The Potsdam Gold-Ores of the Black Hills of South Dakota

    By Frank Clemes Smith

    In describing a certain class of ores, of ever-increasing importance in the Black Hills, they are variously called " refractory,)' "siliceous," or Potsdam;" the first name serving to distinguish

    Jan 1, 1898

  • AIME
    Lake Superior Paper - The Silver Sandstone District of Utah

    By Charles M. Rolker

    THIS remarkable and well-known district lies about 320 miles south of Salt Lake City, in Washington County, near the Arizona border of the territory. It is now reached by the Utah Southern Railroad an

    Jan 1, 1881

  • AIME
    Lake Superior Paper - The Taviche Mining-District near Ocotlan, State of Oaxaca, Mexico

    By H. M. Chance

    The Taviche district is about 12 miles from the town of Ocotlan in the State of Oaxaca, and about 250 miles south of the City of Mexico. Its altitude rises to something more than 5,000 ft.; and althou

    Jan 1, 1905

  • AIME
    Lake Superior Paper - The Technology of Cement Plaster

    By Paul Wilkinson

    From the earliest times, the principal component of mallplaster has been ordinary lime. Plaster-of-Paris has also been known from early times, but never used to any extent in the actual base-work of p

    Jan 1, 1898

  • AIME
    Lake Superior Paper - The Whopper Lode, Gunnison County, Colorado

    By Persifor Frazer

    The following notes on the Whopper and adjoining mines in the Gunnison district of Colorado mere made in the spring of this year. The time chosen for the author to visit the region was, unfortunately,

    Jan 1, 1881

  • AIME
    Lake Superior Paper - The Zinc-Smelting Industry of the Middle West

    By H. C. Meister

    The zinc-smelting industry of the United States has grown very rapidly in recent years and bids fair to outrival that of all other countries in the future. On account of the geographical situation of

    Jan 1, 1905