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The Alleged Mineral Zoning At Mount IsaBy Roland Blanchard
ABSTRACT RECENT discovery at Mount Isa of copper mineralization in commercial amount at a depth of 1000 ft., coinciding with downward termination of ore at about the same depth within the larger si
Jan 1, 1943
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Producing – Equipment, Methods and Materials - Identification of Mixtures of Waters from Chemical Water AnalysesBy J. C. McKinnell
The appraisal of an oil lease may often be mad,? through production decline analysis, which requires description of the functional relationship between the oil production rate and either cumulative pr
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Part II - Papers - The Solubility of Sulfur in Silicon-IronBy H. C. Fiedler
The solubility of sulfur in Si-Fe was determined by the metallographic examination of heat-treated and quenched samples. In the absence of manganese, the solubility in 3.1 pct Si-Fe was found to be ab
Jan 1, 1968
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Institute of Metals Division - Creep Behavior of Magnesium-Cerium AlloysBy C. S. Roberts
Four binary alloys in this system were creep tested at 300°' to 600°F. A photographic study of microstructural changes showed that the outstanding creep resistance results primarily from a potent
Jan 1, 1955
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Combustion - Coke Formation in Domestic Stokers (With discussion)By Walter Knox, Charles H. Sawyer
All of the coals commonly used in domestic bituminous stokers form coke, and satisfactory operation depends upon the fact that the coke formed is so weakly bound together that it breaks readily in the
Jan 1, 1944
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Combustion - Coke Formation in Domestic Stokers (With discussion)By Charles H. Sawyer, Walter Knox
All of the coals commonly used in domestic bituminous stokers form coke, and satisfactory operation depends upon the fact that the coke formed is so weakly bound together that it breaks readily in the
Jan 1, 1944
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Technical Papers and Discussions -Miscellaneous Metals and Alloys - Thermal Expansion Properties of Iron-cobalt Alloys (Metals Tech., Feb. 1948, TP 2320) With discussionBy W. C. Ellis, M. E. Fine
In the iron-cobalt system there are several property-composition relationships of theoretical importance. The alloys are ferromagnetic exhibiting a maximum saturation at approximately 33 at. pct cobal
Jan 1, 1949
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Papers - Mining - Reef Prospecting by the Resistivity Method in Uganda (T. P. 1676)By H. J. R. Way
The work to be described was undertaken at various periods from 1937 to 1939 on the Busia gold field, in the eastern province of Uganda. It was decided to examine the possibility of reef prospection b
Jan 1, 1946
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Papers - Mining - Reef Prospecting by the Resistivity Method in Uganda (T. P. 1676)By H. J. R. Way
The work to be described was undertaken at various periods from 1937 to 1939 on the Busia gold field, in the eastern province of Uganda. It was decided to examine the possibility of reef prospection b
Jan 1, 1946
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Institute of Metals Division - Kinetics of Thermal Reorientations in Cold Rolled Zirconium (Discussion page 1573)By R. K. McGeary, B. Lustman
Orientation relationships and rates of annealing of 97 pct cold rolled zirconium have been studied by X-ray techniques, metallography, and by hardness measurements. The process of annealing occurring
Jan 1, 1954
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Time-To-Fracture Tests On Platinum, 10 Per Cent Iridium-Platinum And 10 Per Cent Rhodium-Platinum AlloysBy H. E. Stauss
THE time-to-fracture test has been applied to pure platinum and to two alloys of platinum under the special conditions of small cross-sectional area of the specimens and of a test temperature above th
Jan 1, 1943
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Papers - Properties of Metals - Effect of Heat Treatment on Properties and Microstructure of Britannia Metals (With Discussion)By H. B. Smith, B. Egererg
In a previous paper1 the authors dealt with the physical properties of cold-rolled and heat-treated Britannia metal of the approximate composition Sn, 91 per cent., Sb, 7 per cent. and Cu, 2 per cent.
Jan 1, 1930
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Iron and Steel Division - The Austenite Solidus and Revised Iron-Carbon Diagram (Discussion)By M. G. Benz, J. F. Elliott
Otto Schaaber (Institut für Harterei-Technik, Bremen -Schönebeck, Germany)— Langenberg, Pestel, and Honeycutt gave an interesting example of the grain refining effect nonstationary magnetic fields may
Jan 1, 1962
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Technical Notes - Formation of Nitrides from Atmospheric Exposure During Creep Rupture of 18 Pct Cr-8 Pct Ni SteelBy E. J. Dulis, G. V. Smith
AS reported several years ago,' nitrogen may be taken up from the atmosphere by austenitic Cr-Ni steels during creep or creep-rupture tests. This was indicated by chemical analysis and by the app
Jan 1, 1953
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Institute of Metals Division - The Activity of Carbon in Iron-Cobalt Alloys at 1000°CBy R. P. Smith
The carbon content of a number of alloys ranging (before carburitation) from purified iron to purified cobalt was determined for fixed activities of carbon by equilibration with each of six CO-CO2 atm
Jan 1, 1965
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Natural Gas HydratesBy Don B. Carson, Donald L. Katz
NATURAL gases under pressure form crystal-line hydrates with water. Experimental data are reported on four-phase equilibrium for the methane-propane-water, methane-pentane-water, and methane-hexane-wa
Jan 1, 1941
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Iron and Steel Division - Grain Refinement of Steel Ingots by Solidification in a Moving Electromagnetic Field (Discussion)By C. Richard Honeycutt, Frederick C. Langenberg, Guenter Pestel
Otto Schaaber (Institut für Harterei-Technik, Bremen-Schönebeck, Germany)— Langenberg, Pestel, and Honeycutt gave an interesting example of the grain refining effect nonstationary magnetic fields may
Jan 1, 1962
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Institute of Metals Division - The Study of the Structural and Transformation Characteristics of the Pressure-Induced Polymorphs in BismuthBy T. E. Davidson, A. P. Lee
It is known from the early work of Bridgman that the two lowest-pressure transitions (I-II and II-III) are accompanied by substantial and abrupt changes in resistivity and Volume. However, unlike the
Jan 1, 1964
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Reservoir Engineering-General - Pressure Interferenre Effects Within Reservoirs and AquifersBy T. F. Mueller, P. A. Witherspoon
For the case of an infinite radial system operating at constant terminal rate, the reservoir engineer often uses the "point source" solution of the diffiusivity equation to study pressure interference
Jan 1, 1966
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Calorimetry at 1100° to 1200°C: The Copper-Nickel, Copper-Silver, Copper-Cobalt SystemsBy R. N. Dokken, J. F. Elliott
A high-temperature solution calorimeter was used to measure directly the partial molar heat of mixing of nickel in the Cu-Ni system, 0 to 15 at. pct Ni and 1200°C; of silver in the Cu-Ag system, 0 to
Jan 1, 1965