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Knight's Mechanical Encyclopedia (ed. Knight) 126 0 Browse Search
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 16. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 2 0 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in Knight's Mechanical Encyclopedia (ed. Knight). You can also browse the collection for Seneca Stone or search for Seneca Stone in all documents.

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as an artificial stem or flower; sometimes having a prosthetic purpose, as an artificial limb or eye. See under the respective heads :— Arm, Artificial.Leather, Artificial. Auricle, Artificial.Leech, Artificial. Cork, Artificial.Leg, Artificial. Ear, Artificial.Limb, Artificial. Eye, Artificial.Nipple, Artificial. Flowers, Artificial.Nose, Artificial. Foot, Artificial.Palate, Artificial. Fuel, Artificial.Pearls, Artificial. Gems, Artificial.Pupil, Artificial. Gums, Artificial.Stone, Artificial. Hand, Artificial.Teeth, Artificial. Horizon, Artificial.Tympanum, Artificial. Horn, Artificial.Wood, Artificial. Ivory, Artificial. Ar-tiller-y. The word seems to have a very extended signification, having been originally applied to military engines of every description capable of throwing heavy missiles, as the ballista, catapult, etc. Uzziah made use of them at Jerusalem 810 B. C. They are described (2 Chronicles XXVI. 15) as invented by cunning men, to be on the to
n method, and was described by Vitruvius. It has also been used by the French in their works in Algiers. Blocks of 324 cubic feet were floated out and dropped from slings into their places. English recipe:— Puzzuolana12 Quicklime9 Sand 6 Stone spalls9 Iron scales3 Molded or mixed in a box. M. Coignet erected a test arch at St. Denis, near Paris, whose dimensions are as follows:— Span196 feet. Rise of arch19 feet. Cross-section at the crown4 feet by 3.25 feet. Cross-section attesian-well; tunnel; well-boring; and Specific Indexes under civil Engineering and mining. See Raymond's Mines, mills, and furnaces : J. B. Ford & Co., N. Y., 1871. Blake's Mining machinery : New Haven, 1871. Also, Blasting and Quarrying of Stone and Blowing up of Bridges, by Lieutenant-General Sir J. Burgoyne of the English Military Engineers. No. 35 of Weale's Rudimentary Series: London. The following table from General Sir Charles Pasley's Memoranda on mining will give the means of
istory before 1550, when, in an acquittance for delivering up the artillery at Boulogne, they are styled boudetz de. fer. Stone balls were not entirely laid aside in England till the civil war, time of Charles I. Elongated bullets for rifled cannhe other has an oblique (nearly opposite) presentation, and slices off the upper edge of the sole, leaving it beveled. Stone channeling-machine. 2. (Stone-working.) A machine having a series of jumpers or chisels which make a groove across man's arm between the wrist and elbow. The bone tools disappeared in a few years after the advent of the white man. Stone chisels, pointed and wide bitted, also mallets of the modern form, are shown in the paintings of ancient Thebes. They wes. Stall-boards.Tube-extractor. Starling.Tubular bridge. Steam-engine (which see).Tunnel. Steining.Tunnel-excavator. Stone. Artificial.Vault. Street-railway.Vault-cover. Street-sprinkler.Vault-light. Street-sweeper.Viaduct. Street-watering
ts. — Brande. Austrian. A rose-cut diamond of 139 1/2 carats. Sir Isaac Newton suggested that the diamond is combustible, but the first to establish the fact were the Florentine Academicians, in 1694; they succeeded in burning it in the focus of a large lens. Lavoisier, in 1772, examined the results of combustion, which showed it to be pure crystalline form of carbon. The uses of the diamond include the following:— Abradant for various purposes, in wheels, laps, and slicers. Stone drilling and sawing. See carbon Toolpoints. Engraver's ruling, and marking graduations on instruments. Glass-cutting.Lenses.Jewelry. Di′a-mond-cut′ter's Com′pass. (Diamond-cutting.) An instrument used to measure the inclination of the sides of jewels. It is a movable arm a, inserted at an angle of 45° into a metallic base b. It is shown in the lower illustration of Fig. 1630 as measuring the inclination of the collct-side to the girdle and the bizet to the table. See
ches high. Its face is very slightly convex, and 5 inches diameter. En-le-vage′--style. A mode of calico-printing (which see). E-nor′tho-trope. A toy on the principle of the thanmatrope, the stroboscope, and phenakistoscope, which depend for their action upon the persistence of visual impressions. Upon different parts of a card are detached parts of a given figure, and when the card is rotated these become assembled and give a combined impression to the eye. En-rock′ment. Stone pitched on to the seaface of a breakwater or dike, or a shore subject to encroachment by the waves or stream. En-tab′la-ture. 1. (Architecture.) That portion of a classical structure which rests on the columns; it consists of an architruve, frieze, and cornice. An attic or blocking-course is sometimes added. Those members of a portico which were constructed upon the columns, consisted of the epistylium, zophorus, and corona. 2. (Machinery.) A strong iron frame supporting
sharpening machine. Glass-polishing.Scorching. Glazer.Scratch-brush. Glazing-wheel.Scythe-stone. Gouge-slip.Shaking-machine. Grinding and polishing materials.Shave-grass. Sheet-metal polisher. Grinding-machine.Skate-grinder. Grinding-clamp.Skive. Grindiding-mill.Slate-making machine. Grinding-slip.Slicer. Grinding-wheel.Slitting-mill. Grindstone.Smoothing-mill. Grindstone. ArtificialSpade. Grindstone-dresser.Spring-polisher. Holystone.Steel. Hone.Stone-grinding machine. Lap.Stone-polishing machine. Lapidary's mill.Straggling. Lead-mill.Strickle. Lens. Grinding, etc.Tanite. Liner.Tape-carrier. Lustering.Tool-holder for grinding. Marble-polishing.Tripoli. Martin.Tumbler. Mill (varieties, see mill).Varnish. Whetstone.Whiting. Whetter.Wood-polishing machine. Grind′ing and Pol′ish-ing ma-te′ri-als. Abrasive substances used in the solid form: — Grindstone.Charcoal. Hone.Emery-cake. Oil-stone.Fish-skin. Abrasive substances used in powder; mate
edges of a skin which is stretched in the frame, to remove its wrinkles and hold it while being scraped. Skins for parchment are thus stretched for fleshing, scraping, and grinding. See parchment. Her′sil-lon. (Fortification.) A beam, frame, or plank set with spikes to stop a breach or way. A herse; a cheval-de-frise. Hesp. (Weaving.) The length of two hanks of linen threads. Hete-rod′ro-mous Lev′ers. The windlass, capstan, winch, crank, crane, etc. Hewn-stone. Stone blocks in which the faces are hammer-dressed to shape. Hex′a-chord. A musical instrument with six strings. Hey's saw. Hey's saw. A saw invented by the celebrated surgeon whose name it bears. It has one curved and one straight serrated edge. Used in making exsections, operating on the cranium, and removing carious bones from deep-seated places. Hide. A flayed skin of an animal. For specific index see leather. The ancient Scythians made quiver-covers of the
g. Perbend.Square. Pick-hammer.Squinch. Piel.Stabbing. Pietra dura.Steening. Pinning-in.Stereos'atic arch Pise work.Stone. Artificial Pitch.Stone-axe Pitched work.Stone-boat. Plaster.Stone-breaker. Plinth.Stone-breaker's hammer. Plug andrer. Pozzuolana.Stone-grinding machine. Protean-stoneStone-hammer. Pseudisodomon.Stone-molding machine. Pudding-stone.Stone-polishing machine. Pugging.Stone-preserving. Puncheon.Stone-saw. Put-log.Stone-vessel. Quarrel.Stoneware Quarrying.Snces, was destitute of siliceous sand, its place being occupied by coarse powdered gypsum or native sulphate of lime. Stone mortar. 8 parts cement, 3 parts lime, and 31 parts of sand. Brick mortar. 8 parts cement, 3 parts lime, and 27 parts oof resist- ing the immense downward shock of even a light mortar fired at a great angle with a full charge of powder. Stone mortars are of large caliber, from 10 to 22 inches, and have a small chamber. They are light in proportion to their size
lia urens, e, XVI. 17. Stinging nettle, d. Stipa tenacissima, a. Stone, c.Woolen, a; g, II 134. Stramonium or stinkweed, b.Woolen grass (pipe.Water-pipe. Stand-pipe.Welded tube. Steam-pipe.Wooden pipe. Stone pipe.Wrought-iron pipe. Sub-aqueous tube. 2. (Music.) A tubeinery or in a train working together. Pit-coal. Fossil coal. Stone coal. Pit–cock. A cock to discharge air from a waterpipe. Seient pottery of the North American tumuli. Some of the jars of the Stone age show that a kind of templet has been used inside, held by one hmpressions from engraved plates. See copperplate-printing. c. (Stone.) See lithography; lithographic press; photolithography. d. (Faraved plates.Sectional plates. Etched.Stereotypes. Galvanoplastic.Stone. Glyphography.Stone cylinder. Graphotype.Tapered type. LogotypesStone cylinder. Graphotype.Tapered type. Logotypes.Wood carvings. Movable types.Zinc cylinders. presses. Oscillating.Many-type cylinders, common axis. Oscillating bed and platen. Os
m the face, and laid alternately stretcher and header with rustic joints. The quoins may have edges chamfered to an angle of 135° with the face of the building, so as to make a right angular joint. The faces of the stones are usually tooled. Rus′tic work. 1. (Wood.) An imitation of rough or primitive work. Furniture for summerhouses and lawns, made of limbs of trees, taking advantage of natural crooks and crotches to form the shapes desired. See Garden-seat, Fig. 2159. 2. (Stone.) Masonry jagged over with a hammer to an irregular surface. A margin around the joints is recessed. This is known as the margin-draft. When the face is made in imitation of ice, it is called frested rustic-work. When contorted, it is called vermiculated work. Rust-joint. (Metal-working.) A joint made water-tight by a compound which oxidizes or sets on exposure to the air; as the following: — Quickly setting. Sal-ammoniac in powder, by weight, 1 part; flour sulphur, 2 parts; iro
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