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Industrial Minerals - Utilizing and Disposing of Waterborne Industrial WastesBy A. A. Berk
LAGGING technology and the slow spread of information have been the chief obstacles to widespread participation in minimizing the industrial pollution load. These obstacles can be conquered by fact fi
Jan 1, 1958
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Bridgeport Paper - Note on a Specimen of Native IronBy John Birkinbine
A specimen of brown hematite, taken from an iron-ore mine near Anniston, Alabama, exhibits a metallic streak or thread running throngh it. This specimen having been sent to me, I have no personal know
Jan 1, 1895
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Salt Lake City Paper - Development of Selective Flotation at Combined Metals Reduction Co.'s Plant at Bauer, UtahBy R. J. Evans
The Combined Metals Reduction Co.'s plant is at Bauer, Utah. It was built primarily to treat ore from the Combined Metals mine at Pioche, Nevada. Shortly after its completion, the company acquire
Jan 1, 1928
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Methods Of Prospecting And Mining Optical Calcite In MontanaBy E. W. Newman
DURING 1943 and 1944, there was an urgent need for certain grades of optical calcite (Iceland spar) for instruments for military uses. To find a supply of this material, prospecting was carried out in
Jan 1, 1945
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Industrial Minerals - Perlite IndustryBy R. E. Barnes
An overall view of the perlite industry is concisely presented. The geology, mining, milling, processing, and applications of perlite, as well as the present status of the perlite industry are treated
Jan 1, 1961
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Mineral Industry Education - Professional Engineers Are Taking Increasing Interest in Professorial ProblemsBy Francis A. Thornson
WITHOUT desiring to perpetrate an Irish bull I think we may safely say that the major developments of the year in mineral industry education have taken place outside of the field itself. I refer to th
Jan 1, 1939
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Gypsum and AnhydriteBy Frank C. Appleyard
Gypsum, the dihydrate form of calcium sulfate, has a history of usefulness to man dating back several thousand years, and a worldwide industry has been built on the mining and processing of this versa
Jan 1, 1975
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Photoelasticity-Mining Engineer's New ToolBy AIME AIME
INSTITUTE members attending the Annual Meeting in New York who want to see one of the mining engineers' newest aids, photoelastic stress analysis, are due for an interesting afternoon on Thursday
Jan 1, 1940
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Technical Notes - Re-solution of Precipitated Silver in Copper-Silver AlloysBy Walter R. Hibbard, Harold Margolin
DURING preliminary tests on the aging of a Cu-plus 5 pct Ag alloy,' a specimen which had been overaged 24 hr at 550°C was annealed in a nitrogen-hydrogen atmosphere first for 2 hr and then for an
Jan 1, 1952
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Some Aspects of the Coal Mining IndustryBy S. A. TAYLOR
THERE is probably no other mineral industry of which the public has as much information and misinformation as it has of the coal industry. Unfortunately, however, the general public's knowledge o
Jan 1, 1926
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Mine Land IrrigationBy J. Kinkead, R. M. Sherman, E. M. Frizzel
A recent research study performed under US Bureau of Mines Contract No. J0199088 "Modular Irrigation Equipment for Reclaimed Strip Mined Lands" investigated the feasibility of irrigation as a reclamat
Jan 1, 1983
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American Engineering Council ActivitiesBy AIME AIME
WHEN Vice-chairman Calvert Townley calls the next meeting of the Executive Board of the American Engineering Council of the Federated American Engineering Societies to order in Washington on Sept. 30,
Jan 1, 1921
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Reservoir Engineering-Laboratory Research - Mass Transfer Between Phase in a Porous Medium: A Study of EquilibriumBy M. A. Torcaso, P. Raimondi
To study mass transport in systems simulating oil recovery processes, different porous media were saturated with a mobile (carrier phase) and a stationary phase. Slugs of carrier phase containing a sm
Jan 1, 1966
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Pima Expansion IV Uses Semiautogenous GrindBy John H. Bassarear, Harold W. Sorstokke
The fourth expansion within 10 years was completed at Pima Mining Co. during late 1971. The first three expansions increased capacity from 3000 to over 40,000 tpd. Conventional crushing and grinding p
Jan 1, 1974
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Valuation Of Mineral Property (747034f8-6b6e-4c27-b435-1b1ef9c1c13d)By L. C. Raymond
Valuations in the mineral industry differ from those of other enterprises because mines and oil wells have a definite life so cannot be considered a perpetuity. This requires that in any mineral-prope
Jan 1, 1964
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Economics of Mineral PigmentsBy W. M. Myers
Certain minerals possess inherent color and other properties that make them suitable for the pigmentation of paints, mortar, plaster, concrete, face brick, and other materials. Their production is one
Jan 1, 1949
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Part I – January 1968 - Communications - Thermodynamic Measurements Using Atomic AbsorptionBy E. J. Rapperport, J. P. Pemsler
We have made calculations to evaluate the sensitivity of atomic absorption as a technique to measure vapor pressure changes with temperature. Our conclusion, supported by the experimental findings pre
Jan 1, 1969
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Papers - Coalesced Copper-Its History, I'roduction and Characteristics (T.P. 1238, with discussion)By H. H. Stout
In the early fall of 1925, the writer was conducting, in the Ledoux and Co. laboratory, New York, experiments directed toward ascertaining the effect on its impurity content when cathode copper was su
Jan 1, 1941
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A New Method of Depth Determination in Earth-resistivity MeasurementsBy I. E. Rosenzweig
GEOPHYSICAL prospecting by earth-resistivity methods is frequently applied to investigation of structural problems in geology. Fig. 1 indicates a scheme of the general arrangement used in these metho
Jan 1, 1938
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Calcium Metal Production, a New American IndustryBy A. B. Kinzel
ALTHOUGH calcium carbide and other compounds of calcium, as well as a number of calcium alloys, are well known and are the basis of important industries in the of United States, calcium metal has been
Jan 1, 1941