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Mining Industry Continues With Lower Fatal-Injury RatesBy S. H. Ash
THE increasing need for the products of our mines, mills, and processing plants, the loss of mine manpower to plants other than those concerned with the mineral industry, and the drafting of our young
Jan 1, 1952
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Hazelton Paper - Topographical Surveying and Keeping Survey NotesBy Richard P. Rothwell
The communication which I hare to lay before my fellow-members of the Institute, is no elaborate paper, nor the statement of any great discovery; it is simply the record of convenient methods of condu
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Sizing and Operating Continuous ThickenersBy J. H. Wilhelm, Y. Naide
Continuous thickeners can be sized from previous experience, continuous pilot-scale test results, or batch settling tests. It is relatively simple to size full-scale thickeners when previous experienc
Jan 1, 1982
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Photoelectric Sorting Of Optical FluorsparBy W. T. Turrall, D. Porter
THE crystal laboratory, Dept. of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was confronted with the problem of obtaining a supply of optical grade calcium fluoride (CaF2) for use in growing synth
Jan 1, 1952
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Block-Signal And Dispatching Systems In Metal MinesBy R. T. Murrill
BLOCK-SIGNAL and dispatching systems have been in use on surface railways for years, but only recently have they been applied to underground mining conditions. Formerly, all ore was moved underground
Jan 2, 1922
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Papers - Comminution - Considerations of Mill Liners (T. P. 1795, Min. Tech., March 1945)By Warren L. Howes
Literally hundreds of designs of mill liners are in use in current grinding operations, varying in contour from smooth to the roughest of surfaces, and in materials from scrap rail to alloy steels. A
Jan 1, 1947
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Papers - Comminution - Considerations of Mill Liners (T. P. 1795, Min. Tech., March 1945)By Warren L. Howes
Literally hundreds of designs of mill liners are in use in current grinding operations, varying in contour from smooth to the roughest of surfaces, and in materials from scrap rail to alloy steels. A
Jan 1, 1947
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Mineralogical Characteristics Affecting the Concentration of a Semioxidized Lead-silver OreBy R. E. Head
SOME mixtures of sulphide and oxide ores from the Tintic district in Utah are of a sufficiently good grade to be shipped to the smelter without beneficiation. In mining this type of ore, however, a ma
Jan 1, 1938
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Efficiency in Use of Oil as FuelBy W. N. Best
THIS paper is not intended as a scientific discussion of the combustion of oil but is written from, the standpoint of an operator who has the experience and qualifications necessary to guide others in
Jan 8, 1920
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Economics - Economics of Proration (With Discussion)By Joseph E. Pogue
Proration in the petroleum industry has come to mean a method for curtailing the production of crude petroleum by artificial effort, and it is in this sense that the term is employed throughout this p
Jan 1, 1932
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Papers - X-ray Study of Orientation Changes in Cold-rolled Single Crystals of Alpha Brass (With Discussion)By Carl H. Samans
The attention of physicists and metallurgists has been directed toward the study and explanation of the deformation textures in metals for the past 15 years. In 1920 N. Uspenski and S. Konobejewskil w
Jan 1, 1934
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Controlling Subsidence of a Large Inverted Cone of Barren Rock Lying above the Ore Body, Colorada Mine, Cananea Consolidated Copper CompanyBy William Catron
BECAUSE the rich La Colorada orebody of the Cananea Consolidated Copper Co. does not outcrop at surface, after its discovery (by churn drill) and before mining was begun, a large amount of development
Jan 1, 1938
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Philadelphia Paper - Mechanical Properties and Resistance to Corrosion of Rolled Light Alloys of Aluminum and Magnesium with Copper, Nickel and Manganese (with Discussion)By P. D. Merica, A. N. Finn, R. G. Waltenberg
CeRtain compositions of the light, i.e., aluminum-rich, alloys of aluminum with magnesium and copper have become quite well known within the past ten years under the name of duralumin. These alloys ar
Jan 1, 1921
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Milling and Concentration - Mechanism of Filtration (with Discussion)By Isaac H. Odell, Arthur W. Hixson, Lincoln T. Work
Although a few engineers have recognized the problem of the mechanism of filtration it has never been studied in a quantitative way. A background for a better understanding will be afforded by a surve
Jan 1, 1926
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Extractive Mettallurgy Division - Thermodynamics of the Cu-Fe-S System at Matte Smelting TemperaturesBy W. A. Krivsky, R. Schuhmann
PREVIOUS papers in this series on the thermo-•t dynamics of copper-smelting systems have presented a survey of the field and an outline of the overall program: thermodynamic studies of iron silicate s
Jan 1, 1958
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Training of Engineering StudentsBy E. P. Mathewson
DURING the past 35 years it has been my privilege to deal with hundreds of recent graduates from engineering schools all over the world. In consequence, I, feel that I have learned something about the
Jan 1, 1923
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Cleveland Paper - The Function of Slag in Electric Steel-RefiningBy Richard Amberg
While the old-time melter was satisfied to bring his metal out in the desired condition, and therefore took care to have the slag liquid enough, the importance of a thorough knowledge of the slag is a
Jan 1, 1913
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Analysis of Wet Grinding Circuit Control Using Inferential Particle Size MeasurementBy S. K. Kawatra, R. A. Seitz
The use of inferential particle sizing for closed wet grinding circuit control has been practiced for several years. This paper presents a review of some inferential sizing equations developed for pil
Jan 1, 1984
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Roanoke, Va. Paper - Copper Slime TreatmentBy F. G. Coggin
" If you could only get that motion into a machine," said a gentleman, as he watched the process of making a " van " on a shovel, and saw the copper roll up to the highest point, "it would beat the wo
Jan 1, 1884
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Colorado Paper - Grinding Resistance of Various Ores (with Discussion)By Luther W. Lennox
During the last few years, one of the great problems in the milling of all ores has been that of grinding. This subject involves not merely the cost of the operation, but also the selection of the pro
Jan 1, 1920