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Cleaning - Combination Wet and Dry Coal-cleaning Process (With Discussion)By Ray W. Arms
The combination wet and dry coal-cleaning process is not an attempt at a compromise between the wets and the drys nor is its merit confined entirely to the limitation of moisture in the smaller sizes.
Jan 1, 1931
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Housing, Health, Education, and SafetyBy GILBERT C. DAVIS
ANY thought of Morenci naturally includes its sister town of Clifton, its gateway to the outside world. Clifton, the country seat of Greenlee County, is the terminus of a branch line of the Southern P
Jan 1, 1942
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Discussions - Of Mr. Jenney's Paper on The Mineral Crest, or the Hydrostatic Level Attained by the Ore-Depositing Solutions, in certain Mining Districts of the Great Salt Lake Basin (see p. 46)George Otis Smith, Washington, D. C. (communication to the Secretary) : The somewhat exceptional features discussed by Dr. Jenncy in his paper on " The Mineral Crest" mere recognized and described by
Jan 1, 1903
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Mineral Economics - A New Curriculum in Mineral EducationBy W. M. Myers
MINERAL Economics is the most recent profession to be recognized as a separate division of the mineral industries. It has originated from the increasing awareness of the importance of the economic asp
Jan 1, 1948
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The Mexican Attitude Toward Foreign InvestmentsBy AIME AIME
A SYMPOSIUM on current. conditions in Mexico, particularly in the oil and mining industries, was a most successful feature of the May meeting of the New York Section of the A.I.M.E. Heath Steele, vice
Jan 1, 1938
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Software/Hardware Selection Considerations For Ming ApplicationsBy Betty L. Gibbs
A company must have an organized approach to effectively sort through the profusion of available software and hardware and find the programs and equipment which fit defined needs. The selection proces
Jan 1, 1983
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Discussions - Of Mr. Field's Paper on the Condition and Action of Carbon in Iron and Steel (see p. 559)William Metcalf, Pittsburg, Pa. (communication to the Secretary*): I am greatly pleased that some one has at last reached what I have long regarded as the only rational explanation yet given of the re
Jan 1, 1904
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Discussions - Of Mr. Gillette's Paper on Investigations in Thermal Chemistry, Showing Atomic Heat-Valency (see p. 702)AlfreD H. Cowles, Cleveland, Ohio (commuaication to the Secretary*):—Mr.Gillette's paper and his deductions seem to me of the very greatest importance, if the validity of his conclusions and figu
Jan 1, 1904
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Discussion - Of Mr. Edwards' Paper on Concrete in Mining and Metallurgical Engineering (see p. 60)Edwin H. MessiteR, New Pork City (communication to the Secretary*):—Under the heading " Flues," Mr. Edwards refers to the Bee-hive construction, a cross-section of which is shown in Fig. 4 of his pape
Jan 1, 1905
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Comparison of Methods for the Determination of Iron and Phosphorus in -SteelBy Messrs. von Jonstorff
Continued Discussion of the Paper of Messrs. von Jonstorff, Blair, Dillner and Stead, presented at the New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute, October, 1904.* (Bethlehem Meeting, February,
Mar 1, 1906
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Minerals in a Power-controlled WorldBy H. Foster Bain
FROM time to time geologists and mining engineers, impressed by the heavy demands made on our mineral reserves' by modern industry, and particularly by the steadily mounting rate of production ne
Jan 1, 1930
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Salt Lake Paper - “Playa” Panning on the Cauca RiverBy William F. Ward
One often reads of the rich placer gravels in many of the citnoe-trav-elqd rivers of South America. The apparent richness of these gold-bearing gravels impresses the traveler, and in fact he may see b
Jan 1, 1915
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Vanadium-Deposits in PeruBy James F. Kemp
Discussion of the paper of D. Foster Hewett, Bulletin To. 27, March, 1909, pp. 291 to 310. JAMES F. KEMP, New York, N. Y.:-Mr. Hewett's paper is one of exceptional interest, because it not only
Oct 1, 1909
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Lake Superior Paper - Discussion of Dr. Don's paper on the Genesis of Certain Auriferous Lodes (see p. 564)Joseph LeConte, Berkeley, Gal.: I have read with some care and with extreme interest the work of Dr. Don, and have 110 hesitancy in expressing my high estimate of its value. We have here an example of
Jan 1, 1898
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Discussion - Of Mr. Cook's Paper on Experience with the Gayley Dry Blast at the Warwick Furnaces, Pottstown, Pa. (see p. 705)EdgaR S. Cook, Pottstown, Pa.:—Many friends and acquaintances seem to be under the impression that the Warwick Iron & Steel Co. received a' license from Mr. Gayley, free of cost, as an inducement
Jan 1, 1909
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Discussions - Of Messrs. Hofman, Green and Yerxa's Paper on a Laboratory Study of the Stages in the Refining of Copper (see p. 671)Lawrence Addicks, Perth Amboy, N. J. (communication to the Secretary*): The excellent series of photo-micrographs given in this paper shows clearly the relation between micro-structure and cuprous oxi
Jan 1, 1904
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Production of Alumina from Low-Grade Domestic MaterialsBy R. S. Dean
JUST as the mineralogical name bauxite has come to include several minerals not known at the time the name was first applied, so the concept of bauxite as the one source of alumina must be enlarged du
Jan 1, 1943
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Discussions - Of Mr. Weed's Paper on Section Across the Sierra Madre Occidental of Mexico (see Trans., xxxii., 444)In traversing lately the Sierra Madre, west of Sail Pedro and Guanacevi, I estimated the topographic summit at several points, by aneroid barometer, at about 8,500 ft. Mr. Weed's measurements, 40
Jan 1, 1903
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A New Silicate of Lead and ZincBy Van Der Muelen P. A.
SOME time ago, the writer received from W. 0. Borcherdt, Manager of the, works of the Bertha Mineral Co. at Austinville, Va., several specimens of a dense yellowish slag-like material, containing cavi
Jan 5, 1917
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Shaft Surveying in the Brown Hematite Mines of Northampton County, PennsylvaniaBy Ellis Clark
THE greater portion of the brown ore in the vicinity of Easton, along the north slope of the Lehigh Mountain or Durham range of hills, is obtained from mines instead of from open cuts or quarries, as
Jan 1, 1879