Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
OFR-126-81 Evaluation Of Control And Protection CircuitsBy E. C. Strycula
Solid-state equipment offers a number of potential advantages in the coal mining industry. These advantages can only be realized, however, through careful and judicious design of the control and prote
Jan 1, 1981
-
Professional Steps in the Blasting ProcessBy Mark William Withey
"Blasting safety in surface mining is a necessary industrial goal. Proper techniques and disciplinesexercised during the blasting process enhance the probability of achieving that goal.The blasting pr
Jan 1, 1995
-
The Canadian Power Situation With Particular Reference to Thermal-Electric PowerBy C. E. Baltzer
This paper highlights the electric power situation in Canada, and introduces brief explanation of the salient differences between electrical practice in the United States and Canada. The availability
Jan 1, 1958
-
Formation of Hard Spots in Secondary BrassesBy Isrun Bohlinger
Resources recovery of brasses for semifinished products often results in the formation of hard spots impairing the quality of following abrasive and/or surface finishing processes. A short survey is g
Jan 1, 1998
-
Crystalline Silica Analysis: A Comparison of Calibration Materials and Recent Coal Mine Dust Size DistributionsBy Steven J. Page
Since 1982 standard calibration materials recommended for respirable crystalline silica analysis by the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) P7 Infrared Method and the National Institute for O
Aug 3, 2005
-
IC 7904 Research And Technologic Work On Coal And Related Investigations, 1956 ? Introduction And SummaryThis report is the 21st in a series summarizing research and technologic work on coal and related investigations by the Federal Bureau of Mines - the Chard of the series published on a calendar-year b
Jan 1, 1959
-
Pennsylvania Hotel, New York, to Be Headquarters for Annual Meeting of the Institute, Feb. 15-19By AIME
NEW YORK'S largest hotel, the Pennsylvania, will be filled with mining and oil men and metallurgists the third week of February when some 3000 AIME members, their wives, and guests will gather fo
Jan 1, 1948
-
IC 7108 Utilization Of Natural Gas For Chemical ProductsBy Harold M. Smith
Natural gas has been used as a fuel and source of energy almost from its discovery, but its use as a chemical raw material may be said to have begun in 1918, when Brooks and Humphrey3/ showed. presenc
Jan 1, 1940
-
Biosorption of Cadmium from Aqueous Solutions by Waste MicrozymeBy Yunnen Chen
The test and use of natural materials as biosorbents for the removal of heavy metals from industrial wastewater is under constant development. In the present study, the biosorption capacity of waste m
Jan 1, 2009
-
Lead and ZincBy P. Raffinot, C. H. G. Bushell, S. Hodgson, E. F. Milner, H. J. Bosshardt, N. Draper, D. E. Pickett, Edwin T. McKnight, J. Prieto
Zinc ranks third and lead fourth in world nonferrous metal conumption. In 1972 the free world consumed 3,333,000 mt of refined lead and 4,422,000 mt of refined zinc. The lead tonnage was divided into
Jan 1, 1985
-
RI 5281 Development Of A Chloride Volatilization Process For Manganese Ores From Aroostook County, Maine: Progress Report - SummaryBy R. T. MacMillan
Many bench-scale tests and studies have been conducted in developing and testing a chloride-volatilization procedure Ear treating low-grade manganese ore from the Maple Mountain-Hovey Mountain deposit
Jan 1, 1956
-
Message for Christmas and the New YearThe Institute has set important objectives for 1988 to make the Institute still more purposeful. Precious metals The Second International Symposium on Mining, Extraction, and Processing of Precious M
Jan 1, 1987
-
The Viscosity of Liquid Lead-Tin Alloys and its Temperature DependenceBy José D. T. Capocchi
Viscosity of liquid lead, tin, and Pb-Sn alloys has been measured by the rotational viscometer method in the temperature range from 50 K above their respective liquidus temperature to 823 K. The resul
Jan 1, 2000
-
Recent Design Improvements In The Grate-Kiln System ? IntroductionBy George J. Skoronski
The economics of pellet plant operation, in terms of fuel and power consumption, flexibility in the selection of the cheapest fuel source, system availability, maintenance costs, and the simplicity of
Jan 1, 1983
-
The 132nd Meeting of the InstituteBy AIME AIME
ANOTHER meeting of the Institute has passed into history and it fully sustained the reputation of the Institute as a live organization of the men, and nowadays the women, concerned with the mineral .
Jan 1, 1925
-
IC 8251 Coal Carbonization In The United States, 1900-62 ? Introduction (56b0504a-3bf3-44b2-aef6-99a13575f3c4)By Eugene T. Sheridan
The process of converting coal into coke is known as carbonization. Essentially, carbonization is destructive distillation in which the volatile matter of coal is released when coal is he ted above it
Jan 1, 1965
-
IC 8251 Coal Carbonization In The United States, 1900-62 ? IntroductionBy Eugene T. Sheridan
The process of converting coal into coke is known as carbonization. Essentially, carbonization is destructive distillation in which the volatile matter of coal is released when coal is heated above it
Jan 1, 1965
-
Variability In Environmental Characteristics Of Hydrothermal-Vent Ecosystems: What?s At Risk?By C. L. Van Dover
Organisms living at hydrothermal vents are adapted to catastrophic disturbances in their environment caused by processes such as tectonic activity and mineralization that shift the locus of fluid flux
Jan 1, 2008
-
RI 3573 Use Of Brine In A Kansas Field For Secondary Recovery Of Oil ? IntroductionBy C. J. Wilhelm
Brine produced from subsurface formations may be employed successfully instead of fresh water as a flooding, medium in the secondary recovery of oil. The feasibility of this substitution has been prov
Jan 1, 1941
-
RI 3573 Use Of Brine In A Kansas Field For Secondary Recovery Of Oil ? Introduction (841ee18f-f5bf-442b-b3bf-b68defa58be5)By C. J. Wilhelm
Brine produced from subsurface formations may be employed successfully instead of fresh water as a flooding, medium in the secondary recovery of oil. The feasibility of this substitution has been prov
Jan 1, 1941