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New York Paper - The Condition and Action of Carbon in Iron and Steel (Discussion, p. 979)By Herbert E. Field
The study of the condition and action of carbon in iron and steel is singularly complicated, because one has to consider, also, many contemporaileous reactions foreign to the one under investigation.
Jan 1, 1904
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Talc And Soapstone In WashingtonBy Hewitt Wilson
IN 1903, T. M. and E. H. Alvord, of Marblemount, Wash., built a soapstone-grinding mill in the Skagit River Valley and are reported to have produced "ground talc" during 1904 and 1905, shipping to the
Jan 1, 1936
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Porphyry Copper Deposits Of The Andean OrogenINTRODUCTION The regional characteristics of porphyry copper deposits in South America southward from Pantanos and Pegadorcito, Columbia, will be summarized. The age of formation of deposits spans
Jan 1, 1978
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Coal - High-speed Classification and Desliming with the Liquid-Solid CycloneBy D. A. Dahlstrom
WITHIN the past decade, certain economic, legal, and technological changes have intensified the necessity for an efficient classifier or deslimer of particles at and below the 200-mesh point. First, m
Jan 1, 1952
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A Successful Drag-line DredgeBy James Magee
THERE is nothing new about drag-line dredging for placer gold. The use of the separate unit for excavating preceded the large barge with excavator mounted upon it, which has reached a high state of pe
Jan 1, 1936
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Paper - Magnetic Methods - A Background for the Application of Geomagnetics to Exploration (With Discussion)By Noel H. Stearn
When the Age of Machinery was suddenly thrust upon civilization about the beginning of the 19th century, an unprecedented demand for mineral resources sprang up. This demand brought about the rapid de
Jan 1, 1929
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Papers - Lead - Softening of Lead BullionBy Arthur E. Hall
Tax operation of "softening" in lead refining is designed, as the word implies, to separate from the bulk of the lead the elements that tend to make lead hard. These elements, which invariably are pre
Jan 1, 1937
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Constitution Of The System Indium-ZincBy A. H. Grobe, F. N. Rhines
THE constitution of the indium-zinc alloy series has been investigated by Wilson and Peretti,1 who determined the liquidus and eutectic temperatures by the conventional method of cooling curves and th
Jan 1, 1944
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Institute of Metals Division - Melting and Freezing (Institute of Metals Lecture, 1954)By B. Chalmers
THE practical importance of the phenomena of melting and freezing must have been recognized for a very long time. The difference between ice and water, for example, has had a profound influence on the
Jan 1, 1955
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Boston Paper - Structural Relations of Ore-DepositsBy S. F. Emmons
" The obscurity which still veils from us the true nature of veins will become more and more cleared up when they can be considered in connection with the geological structure of the regions in which
Jan 1, 1888
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American Glass Sands, Their Properties And PreparationBy Charles Fettke
IN THE present day manufacture of glass nearly pure quartz sands are used almost exclusively as the source of the silica, which is the major constituent of all common varieties of glass. Ordinary soda
Jan 2, 1926
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Some Questions On Interrelated Processes Going On In The Blast FurnaceBy B. M. Larsen
IN spite of the great amount of operating experience and of studies directed toward elucidation of the interrelation of the several processes going on in the blast furnace, the present picture of its
Jan 1, 1947
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Drilling - Equipment, Methods and Materials - Filtration Behavior of Circulating Drilling FluidsBy C. Bezemer, I. Havenaar
An investigation was carried out on the dynamic liltration behavior of drilling fluids. In a set-up consisting of a porous pipe through which the drilling mud was circulated, dynamic liltration rates
Jan 1, 1967
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Part IX – September 1969 – Papers - Kinetics of Solution of Hydrogen in Liquid Iron AlloysBy William M. Boorstein, Robert D. Pehlke
The rates of solution (of hydrogen in liquid pure iron and in several liquid binary iron alloys were meas-ured using a constant volume technique. The rates of absorption and desorption were found to
Jan 1, 1970
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PART XI – November 1967 - Papers - Slag-Metal Equilibria in the Pb-PbO-As2O3 SystemBy A. D. Zunkel, A. H. Larson
Equilibrium arsenic contents of Pb-As alloys in contact with PbO-As2O3 slags containing less than 30 mol pct As2O3, were determined at 650°, 700: and 750 C in an inert at?rzosphere. In this temperatur
Jan 1, 1968
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MagnesiumBy J. D. Hanawalt, W. H. Gross
Magnesium has long been known as the lightest of our engineering metals. This metal, silvery white in color, has a specific gravity of only 1.74. Aluminum, the next lightest structural metal, is 1 ½
Jan 1, 1953
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Institute of Metals Division - Constant Strain Rate Bend Tests on Hydrogen-Embrittled High Strength SteelsBy G. Sachs, E. P. Klier, W. Beck
HYDROGEN embrittlement of steels has recently attracted much attention because it is asso- ciated with a variety of failures, especially those of aircraft structural components.' For instance,
Jan 1, 1957
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Governmental Activities of Geophysics Relating to Prospecting: Part I- History and Activities of the Section of Geophysics of the United States Geological SurveyBy F. W. Lee
Historical-From the beginning of time, all ingenuity of mankind has been concentrated upon the methods of finding gold and unusual deposits in the earth. An illustration (Fig. 1) from the old treatise
Jan 1, 1940
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Part X - Communications - Discussion of "High-Temperature Creep of Tantalum" *By J. E. Flinn, E. R. Gilbert
Recently, Green reported some high-temperature, 0.60 to 0.89 T3, creep results on unalloyed tantalum. From his study he determined an activation energy of 114 kcal per mole for steady-state creep usin
Jan 1, 1967
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Reservoir Engineering-Laboratory Research - Design of Laboratory Models for Study of Miscible DisplacementBy R. J. Blackwell, A. L. Pozzi
Scaled laboratory-model studies provide a powerful method for evaluation of a proposed oil-recovery process. In recent years, models have been used extensively to evaluate processes in which solvents