The Mining and Smelting Magazine, Volume 5

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The Office, 1864
 

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Page 340 - MINES.— Rogers' Law relating to Mines, Minerals, and Quarries in Great Britain and Ireland ; with a Summary of the Laws of Foreign States and Practical Directions for obtaining Government Grants to work Foreign Mines.
Page 254 - THE METALLIFEROUS DEPOSITS OF CORNWALL AND DEVON ; with Appendices, on Subterranean Temperature ; the Electricity of Rocks and Veins ; the Quantities of "Water in the Cornish Mines ; and Mining Statistics.
Page 334 - On the Means of Utilising the Products of the Distillation of Coal, so as to reduce the price of Coke ; with descriptions of the Ovens, and of the best Processes in use in Great Britain and on the Continent in the Manufacture of Coke.
Page 152 - This machine made 2| strokes per minute, and was capable of supplying about 20 cubic feet of air, compressed to five atmospheres, per minute. The other machine consisted of a horizontal pump and two vertical branches. The piston was surrounded by water, which rose and fell alternately in the two columns : when it rose...
Page 254 - DE LA BECHE.-REPORT ON THE GEOLOGY OF CORNWALL, DEVON, and WEST SOMERSET.
Page 19 - Work,' as herein-after used, shall mean every Work for the Manufacture of Alkali, Sulphate of Soda, or Sulphate of Potash in which Muriatic Acid Gas is evolved...
Page 322 - Erdkorpers, published in 1834, maintained that all crystalline non-stratified rocks, from granite to lava, are products of the transformation of sedimentary strata, in part very recent, and that there is no well-defined line to be drawn between Neptunian and volcanic rocks, since they pass into each other. Volcanic phenomena, according to him, have their origin not in an igneous fluid centre, nor...
Page 113 - The Right Honourable the Lords of the Committee of Privy Council for Trade have received, from the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, a copy of a...
Page 157 - Machine, which is the invention of Mr. Blake of Newhaven, Connecticut, is employed for breaking limestone and ore for blast furnaces and also stone for metalling roads. It is driven by steam power, and consists of a crushing hopper, in which the stone is broken between a pair of jaws, one fixed in the frame of the machine, and the other vibrating on a centre through a short distance, worked by an ordinary toggle joint and long lever which receives its motion from a crank shaft. The machine is shown...
Page 89 - When the steam begins to escape from between the surfaces of the valve, it gets between the concave and convex surfaces of the two flanges, and its force thus acts upon a larger area, and reacts upon the concave surface of the valve, and causes it to open to a greater extent than the ordinary safety-valve.

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