Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Health And Safety In MinesBy S. H. Ash
Mass production methods, although increasingly important for economic reasons, create new hazards, remove many hazards, and improve health and safety by reducing exposure and obtaining better supervis
Jan 1, 1950
-
Salt - Gravimetric Survey of the Malagash Salt Deposit, Nova Scotia (T. P. 737)By G. W. H. Norman, A. H. Miller
This survey is one of the more recent tests of geophysical methods of prospecting by the Dominion Observatory and the Geological Survey of Canada, of which the purpose is to find out what application
Jan 1, 1938
-
Electricity in Oil Fields - Use of Electricity in the Mid-Continent Field (with Discussion)By D. L. Johnson
Only general treatment of a subject of such scope can be given in a short paper, therefore, except in a few instances, statistics and descriptions of specific installations are omitted. The earlier
Jan 1, 1928
-
New York City Paper - The Use of High Explosives in the Blast Furnace and of a Water-Spray for Cooling in Blowing DownBy W. J. Taylor
FURNACE-MEN who have not taken advantage of the use of dynamite in certain blast-furnace troubles, as explained by Mr. Witherbee in his valuable papers read before the Institute some years since, cann
Jan 1, 1885
-
Paper - Gravity Methods - Experiments with Eötvös Torsion Balance in the Tri-State Zinc and Lead District (With Discussion)By P. W. George
The rapid increase in cost of discovering new orebodies by churn drilling in the Tri-State district has led to some attempts to lessen the expense by using geophysical methods. Electrical prospecting
Jan 1, 1929
-
The Electrical Dehydration Of Cut OilBy F. D. Mahone
MUCH crude oil, as produced from the well, carries varying amounts of water, which may be present as free water in' globules sufficiently large to settle out, in time, if the fluid is allowed to
Jan 7, 1924
-
Papers - Effect of Cold work upon Hardness and Recrystallizing Behavior of Pure Platinum (T. P. 1167, with discussion)By E. M. Wise, R. V. Vines
It is known qualitatively that the recrystallization behavior of platinum is dependent upon the amount and particularly the nature of impurities present, the amount of prior cold-work and the annealin
Jan 1, 1940
-
New Haven Paper - Blast-Pressure at the Tuyeres and Inside the FurnaceBy R. H. Sweetser
At the Buffalo meeting in October, 1898 (Trans., xxviii., 865), our Secretary, Dr. Raymond, in speaking of the obstacles he had encountered in securing contributions to the Transactions from members i
Jan 1, 1910
-
Use of Oxygenated Air in the Blast FurnaceBy Arthur McKee
As HEAT is the controlling factor in all smelting operations, it will be .most helpful to make a new set of calculations on the basis of a .unit of fuel burned at the tuyeres to carbon monoxide. This
Jan 11, 1924
-
Institute of Metals Division - A Simple Device to Improve Uniaxial Loading in Compression Tests (TN)By Wilhelm in der Schmitten
A necessary condition for a uniaxial stress distribution in compression testing is that the specimen end surfaces make full contact with the apparatus compression plates. In addition all compression
Jan 1, 1962
-
Technical Notes - Precipitation Hardening in a Ti-Cu AlloyBy L. M. Howe, J. Gordon Parr, E. Saarema
THE decreasing solid solubility limit at the titanium-rich end of the Ti-Cu constitutional diagram,' Fig. 1, suggests the possibility that titanium-rich alloys may be age-hardenable. However, res
Jan 1, 1957
-
Review of the Month (d2005f24-7ad5-4190-bac8-9e27b4a9136d)IN international affairs, the great event of June was the meeting of representative bankers at Paris -for consideration of the arrangement of a large loan to Germany. The conference dissolved in futil
Jan 7, 1922
-
Oil Well Cores Tell StoryBy AIME
Cores must be cut in half to secure workable samples for saturation, porosity, and permeability tests. They come from the field labeled as to the type of core, well, and depth from which they came.
Jan 1, 1948
-
Minerals Beneficiation - Effects of Rod Mill Speed at Tennessee Copper CompanyBy J. F. Myers, F. M. Lewis
The purpose of the mill tests reported herein, was to determine the relative power efficiency of fast and slow rod mill speeds on the ores of the Tennessee Copper Co. The tests were carried out at
Jan 1, 1950
-
Papers - - Production - Foreign - Petroleum Development in Peru during 1935By Oliver B. Hopkins
Peruvian production for the year 1935 amounted to 17,064,879 bbl., a record amount for any year, bringing the cumulative production of the country up to 188 million barrels. The 1935 figure is an incr
Jan 1, 1936
-
Papers - - Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in Tennessee in 1935By Walter F. Pond, Kendall E. Born
Production of crude oil in Tennessee during 1935 approximated 20,000 bbl., an increase of about 5000 bbl. over 1934. The total production for the state is an estimate, since the only definite figures
Jan 1, 1936
-
Papers - Flow of Solid Metals from the Standpoint of the Chemical-rate Theory (Abstract of T.P.1256)By Walter Kauzmann
EyRing'S general theory of shear rates as a function of the properties of molecular units of flow is outlined and applied to the creep of metals. This theory regards the unit molecular processes
Jan 1, 1941
-
Papers - Crushing and Grinding - Advantage of Ball (Rod) Mills of Larger Diameters and Advantage of Improving Bearings (With Discussion)By Will H. Coghill, Fred D. DeVaney, R. G. O’Meara
The size of ball mills in the ore-dressing industry has increased from about 4 ft. in each dimension to 10.5 ft. in diameter by 8 ft. in length. In the cement industry they are as long as 45 ft. Plain
Jan 1, 1935
-
The Relation of Sphalerite to Other Sulphides in Ores ? DiscussionTHOMAS L. WATSON,* Charlottesville, Va. (written discussion ? ).¬Sphalerite, as is well known, occurs not only as a common constituent of many types of ore deposits formed under widely varying geologi
Jan 4, 1918
-
The Classification Of Public LandsBy George Smith
THE Secretary of the Interior in his recent report to the President has defined the new public-land policy, which is in fact "but a new application of an old policy." His words may be more acceptable
Jan 6, 1914