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Chicago Paper - Essential Factors in Valuation of Oil PropertiesBy Carl H. Beal
The most important factors that should be given consideration in the valuation of oil lands are: (1) the amount of oil the property will produce; (2) the amount of money this oil will bring (based upo
Jan 1, 1921
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Lithium MineralsBy Russell W. Mumford
LITHIA compounds have a place in pharmaceutical and other chemical industries and lithium minerals in glassmaking and ceramics. The metal, although rare, is used to a minor extent in alloys. During th
Jan 1, 1949
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Efficiency Of ScreeningBy Robert Warner
The growing importance of screening makes an accurate measure of the quality of a sizing operation desirable. Screen efficiency is considered equal to the percentage of true undersize in the feed obta
Jan 1, 1924
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Petroleum - Influence of Submergence on the Efficiency of the Oil fell Plunger Pump (Summary)By S. B. Sargent, V. J. Collins, Lester C. Uren
[The conclusions arrived at by authors in paper read before the Petroleum Division and the California Sections of the Americam Institute of Mining and MetallurgicaI Engineers and the Standardization D
Jan 1, 1927
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Flotation of California MagnesitesBy Eric Sinkinson
MANY of the magnesite ores of the western part of the United States contain such large amounts of silica and hydrous silicate minerals that the value of the ores is either low or nominal. Expensive an
Jan 1, 1936
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Minerals Beneficiation - Behavior of Mineral Particles in Electrostatic SeparationBy Shiou-Chuan Sun, R. F. Wesner, J. D. Morgan
FOR successful electrostatic separation, the behavior of the component minerals of the tested ore under various conditions should be known. In the course of investigation, it was found that these are
Jan 1, 1951
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Minerals Beneficiation - Behavior of Mineral Particles in Electrostatic SeparationBy Shiou-Chuan Sun, R. F. Wesner, J. D. Morgan
FOR successful electrostatic separation, the behavior of the component minerals of the tested ore under various conditions should be known. In the course of investigation, it was found that these are
Jan 1, 1951
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Papers - Theoretical Metallurgy and X-ray Metallography - Relation of Crystal Orientation to Bending Qualities of a Rolled Zinc Alloy (With Discussion)By Gerald Edmunds, M. L. Fuller
The development of "fiber" or preferred orientations, during the plastic deformation of metals, and the relation of such structures to the anisotropic characteristics of worked metals has become a sub
Jan 1, 1932
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Production - Foreign - Petroleum in the Indian EmpireBy Eric J. Bradshaw
For several hundred years the petroleum industry has flourished in Burma and at the close of the eighteenth century there were over five hundred producing wells in the Yenangyaung field. These were la
Jan 1, 1931
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A Hot-Wire Anemometer With ThermocoupleBy T. S. Taylor
THE development of the linear hot-wire anemometer has been chiefly clue to the efforts of L. V. Kings1 and A. E. Kennelly and H. S. Sanborn.2 The anemometers used by these investigators consisted esse
Jan 9, 1919
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Papers - Zinc - Manufacture of Silicon Carbide RetortsBy E. J. Bruderlin
A metallurgical process to be economically successful must be carried on under proper conditions of control and equipment. The question of equipment is always of primary importance. In the distillatio
Jan 1, 1937
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Industrial Minerals Treatment Methods - Flotation of California Magnesites (T. P. 733)By S. D. Michaelson, Eric Sinkinson
Many of the magnesite ores of the western part of the United States contain such large amounts of silica and hydrous silicate minerals that the value of the ores is either low or nominal. Expensive an
Jan 1, 1938
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Industrial Minerals Treatment Methods - Flotation of California Magnesites (T. P. 733)By S. D. Michaelson, Eric Sinkinson
Many of the magnesite ores of the western part of the United States contain such large amounts of silica and hydrous silicate minerals that the value of the ores is either low or nominal. Expensive an
Jan 1, 1938
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in Kansas in 1932By E. A. Koester
Kansas produced approximately 35,434,000 bbl. of oil in 1932 compared to 37,018,000 bbl. in 1931, a decrease of 1,584,000 bbl. or 4.2 per cent. These figures do not indicate the amount of oil that cou
Jan 1, 1933
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Filled Stopes - Mining Methods of the Silver King CoalitionBy Robert S. Lewis
Park City, Utah, elevation 7200 ft., is on the eastern slope of the Wasatch Mountains about 25 miles southeast of Salt Lake City, elevation 4200 ft. The town and surrounding mining district are served
Jan 1, 1925
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Papers - Notes on Microstructure and Hardness of Alloys Consisting Essentially of Iron, Chromium and Silicon (T. P. 853, with discussion)By A. G. H. Anderson, Eric R. Jette
During the period from 1910 to 1920, there was a lively interest in the subject of grain growth and many papers were published, followed by interesting discussions. Questions dealing with the fundamen
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Notes on Microstructure and Hardness of Alloys Consisting Essentially of Iron, Chromium and Silicon (T. P. 853, with discussion)By Eric R. Jette, A. G. H. Anderson
During the period from 1910 to 1920, there was a lively interest in the subject of grain growth and many papers were published, followed by interesting discussions. Questions dealing with the fundamen
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Sedimentation - Combination Classification-sizing Process of Mineral Concentration (T. P. 1898, Min. Tech., July 1945)By A. W. Faheneald, Lewis S. Prater
By taking advantage of the fundamental difference between screening and classification—namely, that specific gravity has no effect on screening but is one of the important factors in classification—a
Jan 1, 1947
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Papers - Sedimentation - Combination Classification-sizing Process of Mineral Concentration (T. P. 1898, Min. Tech., July 1945)By A. W. Faheneald, Lewis S. Prater
By taking advantage of the fundamental difference between screening and classification—namely, that specific gravity has no effect on screening but is one of the important factors in classification—a
Jan 1, 1947
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Unemployment-A By-Product of ProsperityBy Arthur Young
UNEMPLOYMENT no longer finds its cure in pros-perity. Not only is there surplus labor in over-developed industries -like coal -mining, but more and more man, power is being released by technical im-pr
Jan 1, 1928