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Washington Survey - Questions Up For ArgumentBy Freeman Bishop
Senator Henry M. Jackson t D. Wash.) recently tossed a live grenade into the hardrock mining industry with proposed legislation to change provisions of the law governing Federally owned mineral values
Jan 1, 1971
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Roanoke, Va. Paper - The Ores of Cripple Creek, VirginiaBy C. R. Boyd
It would be a quite congenial task to attempt to describe all that extraordinary mineral wealth which is now giving such prominence to the region from the James River to the Tennessee line: adjacent t
Jan 1, 1884
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Constant Density Falling Curtain Agglomeration Of Detergents And Other MaterialsBy Clark A. Sumner
An apparatus for agglomerating fine particles was developed in 1969 as a joint effort of Stauffer Chemical and O’Brien Industrial Equipment. Commercial sized units were built for agglomerating home di
Jan 1, 1977
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Tungsten Recovery from Searles Lake Brines by Ion ExchangeBy W. N. Marchant, P. T. Brooks, P. B. Altringer, R. O. Dannenberg
The US Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines conducted laboratory tests to devise a process for recovering a marketable grade of tungsten from the brine of Searles Lake, Calif. The brine contain
Jan 8, 1979
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Productivity In The Lead-Zinc IndustryBy H. M. Callaway
There are key words common to Government and the minerals industry, the use of which immediately spark interest, argument and confusion. Among these is productivity, a term ranking for widespread misu
Jan 11, 1961
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OLIVER Hauls Overburden With Conveyor BeltsBy J. K. Lovrien
A Link-Belt roller-bearing conveyor system was in- stalled recently at the Gross-Marble mine of the Oliver Iron Mining Co. at Marble, Minn., for removal of overburden and lean ore. The material, consi
Jan 12, 1951
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in South Arkansas, North Louisiana and Mississippi in 1931 (With Discussion)By H. K. Shearer
There is little of importance to be added to the production record of south Arkansas, north Louisiana and Mississippi as a result of developrnents during 1931. No discoveries of any probable commercia
Jan 1, 1932
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Financing New Production in the Copper Industry Calls For New ApproachesBy Michael Chender
The current outlook for financing new copper production is not very encouraging. At a time when companies are slogging through a protracted period of low prices as well as having to accept lower profi
Jan 12, 1976
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Dye Penetrant Studies Of Fractures Produced In Laboratory CrateringBy Dennis V. D’Andrea, Joseph L. Condon
Laboratory crater tests were performed in two-dimensional plates and three-dimensional .blocks of Holston Limestone. Fractures in the blocks were exposed by sawing through the crater region, and a tec
Jan 1, 1971
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Quenching of Alclad Sheet in OilBy Horace Knerr
IT has been shown1 that the resistance to corrosion of duralumin sheet is greatly influenced by the quenching medium used in heat treatment, or, more specifically, by the rate of cooling during quench
Jan 1, 1930
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Washington Paper - Further Notes on the Bertrand-Thiel ProcessBy Joseph Hartshorne
The nature if this process and the general course of its development have already been described by me in two papers read before the Institute.* Since the latter paper mas read, in February, 1898,
Jan 1, 1901
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Silver in a Time of ChangeBy Edward Sampson
Despite the many industrial uses, the world market for silver as a commodity is far from free, being dominated by the U.S. Government both through acts of Congress and by policy of the Treasury Depart
Jan 7, 1960
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Handling Bulk Materials From Bins - Principles Of Flow Of Solids In BinsBy Andrew W. Jenike
An efficient storage plant contains a known available volume of bulk solid, and feeds it at the required time, the prescribed rate and without degradation of the product. A storage bin may also perfor
Jan 5, 1968
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What Will the St. Lawrence Seaway And Power Development Mean to the Mineral Industry?Two separate but closely related projects now under construction on the St. Lawrence River- the Seaway and the St. Lawrence Power Project- are providing the impetus for what may become one of the most
Nov 1, 1955
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How the Mining Industry Can Survive Governmental and Environmental RestrictionsBy Jack F. Havard, John S. Lagarias
When ore bodies are faulted or mill feed turns refractory, mining managers and engineers act vigorously to convert imminent failure into eventual success. The recent proliferation of onerous environme
Jan 1, 1979
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Personal (259bcf29-a55d-41c9-a525-a312d407bb4b)(Members are urged to send in for this column any notes of interest concerning themselves or their. fellow-members.) Members and guests who registered at Institute headquarters during the period Nov.
Jan 1, 1915
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Washington Survey - Pollution Issue Growing In National ImportanceBy Freeman Bishop
This year the metal mining industry is in for some difficult decisions as the nation struggles to control inflationary pressures resulting from higher production costs and a money-squeeze policy. Re-
Jan 1, 1970
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Second Pan-American Scientific CongressAt the Second Pan-American Scientific Congress, meeting in Washington, D. C., from Dec. 27, 1915 to Jan. 8, 1916, the following special topics will be discussed in each of the four sub-sections of Sec
Jan 1, 1916
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Recent Geologic Developments on the Mesabi Iron Range, Minnesota (798cea97-e35d-4347-8e8f-e40b382b536b)By J. F. Wolff
J. G. WOLFF, Duluth, Minn. (communication to the Secretary*).-In raising the question (" Newly Discovered Fossil Remains in the Cretaceous Shale," p. 1784) as to the possibility of the so-called Creta
Jan 2, 1917
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Local Section News (8f191a24-b6ab-40b7-8d0a-03a119fe4c38)MONTANA LOCAL SECTION Executive Committee F. M. SMITH, Chairman J. L. BRUCE, Vice-Chairman . D. C. BARD, Secretary, Box 267, Butte, Mont. FREDERICK LAIST W. C. SIDERFIN The semi-annual meeting o
Jan 12, 1915