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This panorama gives a partial idea of the view from the ore bridge, a gantry crane that rides on rails over the ore yard. If I had extended the panorama left-right and down, you'd get a better idea of the incredible view from up there.
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Iron ore, coke, and limestone come up to the top of the blast furnace in skip cars and are dumped into a funnel-shaped feed hopper above the blast furnace, for "cooking" into molten iron. Here's a picture of a skip car on this same track: gigapan.org/conversations/108893/ at the bottom of this track: http...
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We are in the stock house, a long building through which rail cars ran, at the bottom of the inclined track along which skip cars, carrying iron ore, coke, or limestone would be hoisted to the top of Blast Furnace 6, to be "cooked" to make molten iron. Here's a picture of a skip car on this same track: gigapa
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This room is part of the ore bridge gantry crane that rides on rails over the (iron) ore yard, picking up and dumping loads of iron ore in preparation for ironmaking in one of the blast furnaces.
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When Carrie Furnace was operating, rail cars would roll under these hoppers, and workers would (manually) open hatches to release coke from the hoppers above into the rail cars. Normally you wouldn't want a load of coke on the rails. Explanation of coke: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coke_%28fuel%29

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Rail cars carrying iron ore would roll through here, the giant arms above the tracks would pick up a rail car and dump it over the wall at right, to go into the ore yard. This panorama is best viewed in Google Earth.
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This is a 360 degree panorama from one of the four bleeder valves above Blast Furnace 6. From up here you can see down to much of the furnace complex. This panorama is best viewed in Google Earth. See more photos I shot that day: picasaweb.google.com/111415749895648787719/CarrieFurnaceVisit201197
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A 360 degree panorama from a platform on the inland side of Blast Furnace 6 (away from the river), near the top of the furnace. This panorama is best viewed in Google Earth.
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Building in 1818 the Carrie Blast Furnace produced about 1000 to 1250 tons of iron a day. It was closed in 1978 and in 2006 Carrie Furnace 6 and 7 become a National Historic Landmark. www.cmu.edu/steinbrenner/brownfields/Case%20Studies/pdf/Carrie%20Furnace%20Case%20Study.pdf

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This was a scouting mission to find the location from which a panoramic photograph of Homestead Steel Works was shot in 1910. That photo: picasaweb.google.com/pheckbert/Homestead#5427949312697809954
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In 1910, Carrie Furnace was making pig iron and Homestead Works was rolling it into steel sheets and beams. ...-
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