Annual Report, Volum 1Capital Publishing Company, State printer, 1908 |
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Side 27
... cent of phos- phoric acid , ( 59.05 per cent phosphate of lime ) . * Phosphates along Peace River are reported to have been observed by Captain J. Francis LeBaron as early as 1881 . Again in 1886 Captain LeBaron made an extended inves ...
... cent of phos- phoric acid , ( 59.05 per cent phosphate of lime ) . * Phosphates along Peace River are reported to have been observed by Captain J. Francis LeBaron as early as 1881 . Again in 1886 Captain LeBaron made an extended inves ...
Side 38
... cent . The gas was particularly rich in hydrogen , run- ning 18.5 per cent , and comparatively low in nitrogen ( 45.5 per cent ) . " As there was a small supply of peat bricks left after the completion of the gas - producer tests , a ...
... cent . The gas was particularly rich in hydrogen , run- ning 18.5 per cent , and comparatively low in nitrogen ( 45.5 per cent ) . " As there was a small supply of peat bricks left after the completion of the gas - producer tests , a ...
Side 40
... cent . carbonate of calcium and between ten and thirty per cent . of carbonate of magnesium . ( 3 ) Dolomitic , or " cool " , or " slow " limes . Made from lime- stones containing more than thirty per cent , of carbonate of mag- nesium ...
... cent . carbonate of calcium and between ten and thirty per cent . of carbonate of magnesium . ( 3 ) Dolomitic , or " cool " , or " slow " limes . Made from lime- stones containing more than thirty per cent , of carbonate of mag- nesium ...
Side 41
... cent of calcium carbonate and from 20 to 25 per cent of clay . The Roman cements contain 50 to 75 per cent . of calcium carbonate and 50 to 30 per cent . of clay . Peppel , however , proposes to place the range of sandy and clayey ...
... cent of calcium carbonate and from 20 to 25 per cent of clay . The Roman cements contain 50 to 75 per cent . of calcium carbonate and 50 to 30 per cent . of clay . Peppel , however , proposes to place the range of sandy and clayey ...
Side 43
... cent of the weight of the sand adds strength to a mortar . * Concrete building blocks have been , as a rule , favorably received throughout the State . The ease of manufacture , together with the relatively small cost of equipment and ...
... cent of the weight of the sand adds strength to a mortar . * Concrete building blocks have been , as a rule , favorably received throughout the State . The ease of manufacture , together with the relatively small cost of equipment and ...
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abst Acad Agassiz Alachua Clays Angelo Apalachicola River Bog iron Bull bulletin calcareous calcium carbonate Caloosahatchee River cement central Florida Chattahoochee chemical Coast of Florida coastal plains Conrad contains County deposits described elevation Eocene Everglades Florida Keys Florida occurs Florida Phosphates Florida Reefs foraminifera formation formed fossil fuller's earth Gadsden County Geologist Geology of Florida Georgia Gulf Stream hard rock phosphate Heilprin Island Joseph LeConte Jour kaolin Lafayette Lake land Leidy lime limestone mainland marine marls material McGee mineral Miocene observations Ocala Oligocene oolitic Oolitic limestone Orbitoides origin paper peat pebble phosphate peninsula Phila Phosphates of Florida Pleistocene Pliocene Post-Pliocene present Proc Reference to Florida Rept sand Science Sellards Shaler shells silica silicates Smith Southern species Suwannee Tampa Bay Tertiary tion tons Trans Tuomey U. S. Geol underground water United vertebrates Vicksburg Vicksburg Limestone W. H. Dall
Populære avsnitt
Side 52 - ... as follows : Two ordinary glass tumblers of the same size are filled to the brim, one with the dry sand to be tested and the other with water. The water is then poured carefully from the one glass into the sand in the other until it reaches the point of overflowing. The volume of water removed from the glass which was originally full of water can be taken as an approximate measure of the voids in the unit volume of sand contained in the tumbler. A simple calculation will reduce this to percentage...
Side 61 - Horsford and reported upon in two papers, the first of which was published in the Proceedings of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and •with some changes in the American Journal of Science (100).
Side 52 - Agriculture, p. 10, is as follows: '-Two ordinary glass tumblers of the same size are filled to the brim, one with dry sand to be tested and the other with water. The water is then poured carefully from the one glass into the sand in the other until it reaches the point of overflowing. The volume of water removed from the glass which was originally full of water can be taken as an approximate measure of the...
Side 38 - ... peat the producer was maintained in operation for fifty hours, and no difficulty whatever was experienced either in maintaining the load or in handling the fuel bed. The peat was furnished by the Orlando Water and Light Company and was secured from a bog near the city of Orlando, Orange County, Fla. In starting the producer test the fuel bed was built up entirely of the Florida peat, and the usual preliminary run was conducted before the official test began. The total amount of peat consumed...
Side 62 - I have made uo report, from the fact that the general assembly failed to specify any duties or make any appropriations to defray any expenses incurred in reference to the matter. Consequently, nothing has been done by me except to obtain specimens of soils and minerals from the various localities (where marked changes were perceptible) visited by me in the performance of the duties of engineer.
Side 38 - The amount of peat used per electrical horse power per hour available for outside purposes, including the estimated quantity required for the generation of the steam used in the operation of the producer, was 3.16 pounds, while 2.69 pounds were required per brake horsepower hour at the gas engine, available for outside purposes.
Side 39 - ... was 6.98 pounds. The calorific value of the peat as used was 10,082 British thermal units per pound. The principal difficulty in the utilization of peat under boilers appears to be the frequency with which it is necessary to fire. On account of the lightness of the material and also on account of its rapid combustion the fireman was kept at work almost constantly during the test.
Side 18 - On the Agency of the Gulf Stream in the Formation of the Peninsula and Keys of Florida.
Side 36 - As a resul; the first oil which comes out is perfectly water white in color, and markedly thinner than that which follows. The oil is allowed to continue percolating through the fullers...
Side 100 - Pratt, NA Ashley River phosphates. History of the Marls of South Carolina, and of the discovery and development of the native bone phosphates of the Charleston Basin, 42 pages, Philadelphia, 1868.