APPENDIX TABLES Table A-1. U.S. Production of Steel Ingots and Iron and Steel Castings, 1947–65 [Thousands of short tons) January-June 1965. Annual averages: 1949-53 1954-58 1000-63 Shipments. Year Sources: Steel ingot production, American Iron and Steel Institute, Annuai Table A-2. U.S. Production of Steel Ingots and Steel for Castings by Type of Furnace, 1947-65 Table A-5. U.S. Iron and Steel Scrap and Pig Iron Consumption, by Type of Equipment, 1947-65—Continued [Thousands of short tons] Open hearth, Bessemer, basic oxygen, and electric. No pig iron is consumed in these uses; figures for "Miscellaneous uses" in 17-42 Include rerolling rails, which in 1957-62 averaged 450,000 tons per year. •No scrap is consumed in these uses. Included with Bessemer converters. Sources: U.8. Bureau of Mines, Minerals Yearbook and Minerals Industry Surrey. Table A-6. U.S. Iron and Steel Scrap and Pig Iron Consumption, by Type of Consumer, 1949-65 30-05TO 70 pt. 2 28 Data not shown separately prior to 1949. Surveys. Table A-9. U.S. Exports1 of Iron and Steel Scrap, by Destination, 1953-65 January-June 1965. (x) Lee than 500 tons. Includes rerolling materials and from 1953-57, tinpiste circles, cobbles, strip, and scroll shear butts from tinplated scrap; from 1953-63 rerolled materials averaged 91,000 tons per year, or 1.8 percent of total exports; from 1953-56 these tinplated scrap items averaged 17,000 per year, or 0.5 percent of total exports. Source: U.S. Bureau of the Census, U.S. Exports: U.S. Bureau of Mines, Mineral Industry Surveys. Table A-10.1 U.S. Exports of Iron and Steel Scrap, by Grades, 1957–65 Table A-11. U.S. Iron and Steel Scrap and Merchant Pig Iron Prices, 1947–65 |