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Mexico In The Metropolitan News (73446e4b-315b-49a6-98eb-9133ee94c203)This brief resume of events, transpiring in Mexico, culled from the daily New York newspapers, since the last Bulletin went to press, does not indicate any degree of improvement in the situation. MEX
Jan 7, 1919
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New York - Philadelphia Paper - The Mineral Crest, or the Hydrostatic Level Attained by the Ore-Depositing Solutions, in Certain Mining Districts of the Great Salt Lake Basin (Discussion, p. 1060)By Walter P. Jenney
In the limestone area of Tintic and other mining districts of the Great Basin region of Utah, it has been observed that surface-outcrops of ore occur but seldom, and are mainly confilled to points of
Jan 1, 1903
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Cincinnati Paper - The Iridium IndustryBy W. L. Dudley
It is my desire to call attention to a new industry which was started about four years ago, through the discovery by Mr. John Holland, a resident of this city, of the methods employed in working the m
Jan 1, 1884
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Improved method of Measuring in Mine SurveysBy Eckley B. Coxe
IN making surveys in the anthracite coal regions of Pennsylvania, the ordinary engineer's chain (50 or 100 feet long) is generally used, both above and below ground. Sometimes, where it is diffic
Jan 1, 1874
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Preface To The Sixth Book - Concerning The Art Of Casting In General And In Particular.I BELIEVE that my work would surely be host a seed without fit and that I would fail in that cause which disposed me to satisfy your request to write and form this work [75] if while laboring on it I
Jan 1, 1942
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AndesANDES, lying south of Chuquicamata and north of Braden on the western slope of Chile's cordillera, can best be described as a big well-managed copper-mining enterprise without any peculiarly outs
Jan 1, 1957
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Pulse Propagation In RocksBy Werner Goldsmith
This discussion is confined to the first section of Professor Clark's paper entitled 'Elastic and Nonelastic Waves' and its application to wave propagation in rocks. Some published resu
Jan 1, 1967
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Technical Notes - Sigma Phase in the Molybdenum-Ruthenium SystemBy D. S. Bloom
RECENTLY a report has been published on an investigation of the MO-RU system by E. Raub.' In this report it is stated that below approximately 1200°C the system consists of two terminal solid-sol
Jan 1, 1956
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Mexican Paper - The Cyanide-Assay for Copper (Discussion, 1027)By Harry Huntington Miller
In spite of its recognized irregularities, the cyanide-assay for copper has always been popular among volumetric methods, being easy and rapid, and reasonably accurate when the solution tested contain
Jan 1, 1902
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Mining - Acid Coal Mine Drainage. Truth and Fallacy About a Serious ProblemBy S. A. Braley
DRAINAGE of acid mine water into surface streams of coal mining areas is one of the most serious problems of stream pollution, since there is no known method that completely prevents its forming and n
Jan 1, 1957
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Utilizing Sulfur-Based Spray CoatingsBy John M. Dale
Sulfur has attractive features as a base material for coating systems. It melts at 246ºF and can be applied as a liquid above this temperature. Its melting point is just above the environmental stress
Jan 10, 1973
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Notes on the Heat Treatment of High-Speed Steel Tools (0bd4ba66-f13b-42e7-9997-22fb1d86722d)HENRY M. HOWE, Bedford Hills, N. T. (communication to the Secretary?).-The authors valuable results as to the effects of the air-hardening temperature on high-speed steel may be summed up thus: Influ
Jan 6, 1917
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Papers - Basic Factors Involved in Bloating of Clays (T. P. 1486, with discussion)By J. D. Sullivan, Chester R. Austin, J. L. Nunes
It is characteristic of most shales and surface clays that a bloated or vesicular structure is produced by burning to a sufficiently high temperature, usually about 150° to 200°F. above the normal mat
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Basic Factors Involved in Bloating of Clays (T. P. 1486, with discussion)By J. D. Sullivan, Chester R. Austin, J. L. Nunes
It is characteristic of most shales and surface clays that a bloated or vesicular structure is produced by burning to a sufficiently high temperature, usually about 150° to 200°F. above the normal mat
Jan 1, 1942
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Sulfur In Producer GasBy Frederick Crabtree
WHEN Professor Stock asked for a paper on the above subject, it was too late to prepare by June 1, or near that time, one that would involve any appreciable amount of experimental work or original res
Jan 9, 1919
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Jet Pumps for Chemical and Physical LaboratoriesBy Robert H. Richards
(Read at the Amenia Meeting, October, 1877.) DURING the winter of 1868-9, I was called upon by Professor F. H. Storer, to put up the Bunsen filter pump in the chemical laboratory of the Masschusetts
Jan 1, 1878
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New York Meeting - February, 1922Jan 1, 1922
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New York Meeting - February, 1922Jan 1, 1922
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Diversified Institute of Metals Division Program Includes Symposium on Secondary MetalsBy J. S. Marsh
TUESDAY, Feb. 16, was no day for strolling along the cold sidewalks of New York, and a large number of metallurgists sat down with pleasure to the warming task of wiping a few soldered joints. Present
Jan 1, 1943
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Chicago Paper - Blowing-Engines (See Discussion, p. 709)By Julian Kennedy
The different types of blowing-engines in use are so numerous that it would not he practicable to consider them all in this paper. I shall therefore only take up briefly a few well known types. The
Jan 1, 1894