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Reservoir Engineering-General - Results From a Thermal Recovery Test in a Watered-Out ReservoirBy A. L. Barnes
Residual oil in watered-out reservoirs is a tremendous reserve which has been unrecoverable by established production methods. A study of the new recovery methods indicated that the forward combustion
Jan 1, 1966
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Lake Champlain (Plattsburgh) Paper - Studies in Structural GeologyBy Bailey Willis
It is proposed to present some of the results of observation of the geologists of the Appalachian division during the past seven years, and of experimental study during the past three years, on the su
Jan 1, 1893
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Officers and MembersJan 1, 1886
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Magnesium - Thermal Production of Magnesium-Pilot-plant studies on the Retort Ferrosilicon ProcessBy W. A. Alexander, L. M. Pidgeon
Metallic magnesium and similar meta!s near the top of the electromotive series have been commercially produced by the electrolysis of a suitable molten salt. Despite the success of electrolysis, suffi
Jan 1, 1944
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Institute of Metals Division - Dispersion Strengthening in the Copper-Alumina SystemBy N. J. Grant, K. M. Zwilsky
A series of copper-alumina dispersion strengthened alloys were prepared using three different copper and two different alumina powder sizes. Improvements in strength of up to ten times that of pure co
Jan 1, 1962
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Institute of Metals Division - Uranium-Titanium Alloy System (Discussion page 1317)By M. C. Udy, F. W. Boulger
AN incomplete phase diagram for the U-Ti systern was determined earlier 1 and more recently, a tentative diagram was presented for the uranium-rich end of the system.' In the present re-examinati
Jan 1, 1955
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New York Paper - The Determination of Grain Size in Metals (with Discussion)By A. H. Kline, E. B. Zimmer, Zay Jeffries
It is well known that many properties of a given metal vary with the size of grain or cell. For most industrial purposes, where high ultimate strength and high elastic limit are desired, the manufactu
Jan 1, 1916
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World War II And Its AftermathBy Robert Glass Cleland
THE OUTBREAK of World War II found Phelps Dodge, thanks to both foresight and good fortune, in a position to increase production of its mines and factories to meet the insatiable military and domestic
Jan 1, 1952
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Subsidence Above Abandoned Coal MinesBy Richard E. Gray, Robert W. Bruhn
INTRODUCTION Underground coal mining has been practiced in the United States for over 200 years. Much early mining was not as efficient as today and unrecovered coal pillars, often of variable siz
Jan 1, 1982
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Selenium And TelluriumBy William E. Milligan
SELENIUM and tellurium occupy adjacent positions in the odd division of group VI of the periodic table immediately below sulfur, with atomic numbers 34 and 52 and with atomic weights of 78.96 and 127.
Jan 1, 1953
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Building The WestIN CHAPTER I it was shown that the approximate market value of the copper produced at the twelve big Porphyry mines from 1905 to 1931, inclusive, was $2,821,300,000. This represented the refined metal
Jan 1, 1933
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Institute of Metals Division - Predendritic SolidificationBy H. Biloni, B. Chalmers
Metallographic studies of the segregation of solute in and near the surfaces of chill-cast alloys have shown that, under sufficiently severe conditions, nucleation on the cold mold surface is followed
Jan 1, 1965
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New Mining Methods Rehabilitate Florida’s Strip MinesBy U. K. Custred
To the layman, the term "strip mining" usually applies to the appearance of mined-over land after an operation is completed, not to the technique. This attitude, however, is becoming pass6 in the cent
Jan 4, 1963
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Open Stope - Red Ore Mining Methods in the Birmingham DistrictBy W. R. Crane
Mining of the red iron ores of the Birmingham district has been carried on energetically during the past 60 years, and their development has created a large iron and steel manufacturing center, the on
Jan 1, 1925
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Papers - Flotation Therory and Practices - The Case for the Chemical Theory of FlotationBy G. R. M. Del Giudice, A. F. Taggart, Othon A. Ziehl
In a previous paper1 in which one of the authors collaborated, it was postulated that All dissolved reagents which, in flotation pulps, either by action on the to-be-floated or on the not-to-be-floate
Jan 1, 1935
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Notes on the Cadmium-nickel SystemBy Carl Swartz
IN the course of a recent investigation1 to develop a more satisfactory white-metal. bearing alloy, a number of alloy systems were studied. The cadmium-nickel system showed characteristics desirable i
Jan 1, 1933
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Uses Of Coal (1cf74844-1097-4a79-a36a-5ca147665deb)By Wilbur C. Helt, Joseph J. Yancik
Throughout the history of mankind, the principal use of coal has been to produce heat through combustion. The heat is used in many ways: to warm air space for our comfort; to provide heat or energy to
Jan 1, 1981
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Employees' WelfareReaders of recent Bulletins have doubtless observed that the problem of improving both material and moral condition of employees is receiving close attention from influential members of the Institute.
Jan 5, 1918
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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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Degree Of Liberation Of Minerals In The Alabama Low-Grade Red Iron Ores After GrindingBy Will Coghill
As the title indicates, this paper treats of the degree of liberation of minerals after grinding. To obtain the supporting data a "tool" not commonly used by metallurgists has been employed. It is the
Jan 12, 1926