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The Diastrophic TheoryBy Marcel Daly
THE writer has devoted a number of years to practical operations and to the study of geology in the oil fields. In consequence, he has been brought to investigate the theories advanced to account for
Jan 7, 1916
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Eugene McAuliffe, President, A.I.M.E., 1942By AIME AIME
EUGENE McAULIFFE will be the fifty-ninth man elected President of the Institute. Looking back to the first President, David Thomas, and reading Dr. Raymond eulogy of him, written eleven years after li
Jan 1, 1941
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New York Paper - Enlarging the Worth of the Worker and the Perspective of the Employer (with Discussion)By J. Parke Channing
These days of great industrial and social problems in America produce many suggested solutions and great changes. The practical engineer and employer of labor views these problems differently from the
Jan 1, 1915
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New York Paper February, 1918 - The Employment Manager and the Reduction of Labor Turnover (with Discussion)By Thomas T. Read
The cost of labor turnover in industry is so large as to justify the adoption of almost any means to bring about its reduction. Intensive study has shown that faulty methods of hiring and discharging
Jan 1, 1918
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Coal Division's Coming-out PartyBy AIME AIME
COAL preparation will be the main topic discussed at the first fall meeting of the Coal Division at Pittsburgh, Sept. 11, 12 and 13, though valuation, mergers, safety, stream pollution and other topic
Jan 1, 1930
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Distribution Of Manganese And Of Sulphur Between Slag And Metal In The Open-Hearth FurnaceBy B. M. Larsen, L. S. Darken
SOME years ago we collated all laboratory data then available to us on the distribution at equilibrium of manganese and of sulphur between metal and simple slags, and used the results in setting up an
Jan 1, 1942
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Safety Education in Schools and CollegesBy E. A. Holbrook
AS A whole, engineering schools have not awakened A to the fact that the workmen compensation laws passed in most of our states between 1914 and 1917 effected a quiet but none the less real revolution
Jan 1, 1925
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Bethlehem Paper - Notes on the New Chemical Laboratory of the Missouri School of MinesBy Charles E. Wait
The old laboratory at the School of Mines was among the notoriously bad ones, being situated in apartments of the main collegebuildings not originally intended, and conspicuously unfit, for the use to
Jan 1, 1887
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Atlantic City Paper - A Study of the Elimination of Impurities from Copper-Mattes in the Reverberatory and the Converter (Discussion, 816)By Edward Keller
About a dozen years ago the art of bessemerizing copper- * matte, brought to these shores from France, was first established at the smelter, in Butte, Montana, of the Parrot Silver and Copper Company,
Jan 1, 1899
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North Carolina State Department of Conservation and DevelopmentDepartment of Conservation and Development, State of North Carolina, Raleigh, N C H J Bryson, State Geologist. The latest list of publications will be sent upon request. Of the many Bulletins, Ec
Jan 1, 1933
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Mining and Metallurgy - 1937 - Further Reports of the Annual Meeting - Geophysical Papers Fill Three Active SessionsBy C. A. Heiland
WITH seventeen papers submitted. and thirteen presented in three sessions, the geophysicists had a most successful meeting at New York in February. The first paper on Monday morning dealt with the lo
Jan 1, 1937
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Tracer Study Of Sulphur In The Coke OvenBy R. W. Hyde, B. S. Old, S. E. Eaton
INTRODUCTION ONE of the most important problems facing the steel industry at the present time is that of maintaining at a minimum the sulphur content of many grades of steel where sulphur is known
Jan 1, 1948
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The Southern Soapstones, Kaolin, and Fire¬ Clays, and Their UsesBy P. H. Mell
AMONG the minerals exhibited at the Atlanta Exhibition of 1881, soapstone, kaolin, and asbestos were well represented. The first two occur in large quantities, of very pure quality, throughout the Sou
Jan 1, 1882
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Boston Paper - The Mining and Metallurgical Laboratories of the Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyBy Robert H. Richards
OF the several professions-the chemist, the civil engineer, the mining engineer, the mechanical engineer-the courses of instruction, as arranged at the scientific schools, differ considerably as to th
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Library (c0274118-d7c5-4b01-8872-9b409029c0b5)Book Review MANAGEMENT AND MEN. By Meyer Bloomfield, Boston. The Century Co., New York, 1919, pp. 584, H.X. 5 1/2. $3.50. This hook is an exposition of English efforts to solve the problem of labo
Jan 10, 1919
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New York Paper - The Bogoslovsk Mining EstateBy William H. Shockley
There was an extensive mining and industrial exploitation of Russia, about 20 years ago, by Belgian, French and British capitalists; but the results were discouraging. It is said that the Belgian and
Jan 1, 1909
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The Pittsburg Coal Field In Western Pennsylvania (3aa501c6-b6d3-4864-b602-c3fc2647e469)By H. A. Kuhn
THE Pittsburg coal field in western Pennsylvania, is conceded to be the most important in the world. To measure its importance it is necessary to understand the extent of its service in the various in
Jan 10, 1914
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Washington D.C. Paper - The Southern Soapstones, Kaolin, and Fire Clays, and their UsesBy P. H. Mell
AMONG the minerals exhibited at the Atlanta Exhibition of 1881, soapstone, kaolin, and asbestos were well represented. The first two occur in large quantities, of very pure quality, throughout the Sou
Jan 1, 1882
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The Messina Stationary Basic Copper ConverterBy R. G. Knickerbocker
THE copper smelter and refinery of The Messina (Transvaal) Development Co. Ltd., at Messina, South Africa, was erected in 1920 and 1921, but initial operations were deferred until late in 1922 on acco
Jan 1, 1932
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Role of Fracture Physics in Understanding Comminution PhenomenaBy Klaus Schoenert
In the analysis of comminution processes, it is necessary to have a detailed knowledge of such subprocesses as: transportation of the particles to the zone where they are stressed; the stressing of pa
Jan 1, 1973