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A Study Of The Molybdenum-Carbon SystemBy C. M. Tucker, Kent R. Van Horn, W. P. Sykes
RECENT investigations of the molybdenum-carbon alloys have been reported by Becker and Ebert1‡, Westgren and Phragmén2, T. Takei3, and H. Tutiya4. Takei3 studied the Mo-C system by employing metallogr
Jan 1, 1935
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PART II - Papers - The Effect of Thermal History on the Yield Behavior of IronBy R. E. Hook, R. L. McGaughey, A. M. Adair
The initial yielding characteristics of a vacuum-melted iron have been measured as a function of thertnal history after slow cooling or quenching from a 700°C recrystallizntion anneal. A thermal histo
Jan 1, 1967
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Gold And Silver - Money And Credit (ab8cd72a-17bc-4b46-90db-fac4b154aa29)By Charles White Merrill
Money is one of the most pervasive elements in human life. The compensation for a workman's daily efforts is expressed as a wage and is measured in money. What an individual may consume depends l
Jan 1, 1964
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Birmingham Paper - The Development and Statistics of the Alabama Coal-Fields for 1887By Charles A. Ashburner
[The statistics contained in this paper were collected for the United States Geological Survey and communicated to the Institute, by permission, prior to their publication in the report on the Mineral
Jan 1, 1889
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Papers - Technology and Economics of Ground Mica (T. P. 889, with discussion)By Paul M. Tyler
Fully a decade ago, demand for ground mica began to exceed supplies of scrap mica from manufacturing operations and of waste block from feldspar and sheet mica mining in the United States, with the re
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Technology and Economics of Ground Mica (T. P. 889, with discussion)By Paul M. Tyler
Fully a decade ago, demand for ground mica began to exceed supplies of scrap mica from manufacturing operations and of waste block from feldspar and sheet mica mining in the United States, with the re
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Technique - A Review of Fluorescence as Applied to Minerals, with Special Reference to Scheelite (Mining Tech., March 1946, T.P. 1967, with discussion)By John W. Vanderwilt
The fluorescence of scheelite has been an important aid in recent years in the discovery and development of scheelite deposits. The use of fluorescence of synthetic compounds in industry, particularly
Jan 1, 1949
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Papers - Technique - A Review of Fluorescence as Applied to Minerals, with Special Reference to Scheelite (Mining Tech., March 1946, T.P. 1967, with discussion)By John W. Vanderwilt
The fluorescence of scheelite has been an important aid in recent years in the discovery and development of scheelite deposits. The use of fluorescence of synthetic compounds in industry, particularly
Jan 1, 1949
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Need for a Standard Method for Determining Surface Moisture in CoalBy T. W. Guy
DURING the past three years the Surface Preparation Committee of the American Mining Congress Coal Operators' Committees has been collecting data on dewatering and drying washed coal, and on scre
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Cleveland Meeting – September, 1929 – Pure Iron and Allotropic Transformations (With Discussion)By T. D. Yensen
If the question should be asked at this time: "Does pure iron have allotropic transformations?" the reply would necessarily be, "We do not know." And it is doubtful whether anybody, anywhere, is in
Jan 1, 1929
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Propeller-type Fans for Mine VentilationBy T. H. Troller
FOR a long time propeller-type fans have been considered a very adequate means to move great quantities of air against small static pres-sures. They have been in use for this purpose in mines, as well
Jan 1, 1936
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RefractoriesBy James A. Crookston, William D. Fitzpatrick
Committee C-8 of the American Society for Testing and Materials defines "Refractories" as "Material, usually nonmetallic, used to withstand high temperature," and it defines the term "Refractoriness"
Jan 1, 1975
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Part XII - Communications - New Technique for Orientation of Crystal from Laue Back-Reflection PhotographsBy Robert M. Asimow, Bisuddhi Riddhagni
THE use of back-reflection Laue photographs for crystal orientation is standard in many research projects. The time required for the orientation of any given crystal depends largely on luck and the sk
Jan 1, 1967
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Some Recent American Progress In The Assay Of Copper-Bullion.By Edward Keller
THE ASSAY FOR COPPER. SOMEONE some time ago remarked that some chemists still insist on telling us how to determine copper by the electrolytic method. The. writer must confess that he believes that e
Jan 8, 1913
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Churn-Drilling Costs, Sacramento HillBy Arthur Notman
(San Francisco Meeting, September, 1915) SACRAMENTO HILL is a mass of granite porphyry intruded along a fault between Paleozoic sediments and pre-Cambrian schists in the Bisbee district, Cochise Coun
Jan 8, 1915
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Papers - Inclusions and Their Effect on Impact Strength of Steel, II (With Discussion)By A. B. Kinzel, Walter Crafts
A PRevioUs study1 of the relations of impact strength to inclusions showed that the dynamic strength of steel is lowered by the presence of visible counted inclusions, but that other factors comprised
Jan 1, 1931
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A Comparison Of Methods Available For The Determination Of Surface EnergyBy David A. Summers, John Corwine, Li-King Chen
The results from fracturing plexiglas beams are combined in eight existing equations to determine the surface energy of the material. The reliability of each equation is tested, and the equation in us
Jan 1, 1971
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The Functions Of Power Scrapers And Slackline Cableway ExcavatorsBy Harry A. Roe
THE power drag scrapers and the slackline cableway excavator have been called "long-range excavators." Broadly, their field of usefulness is restricted to work in which their long range of action perm
Jan 1, 1937
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A Study Of The Microstructure Of Some Clays In Relation To Their Period Of FiringBy H. Ries
INTRODUCTION OF the several interesting physical properties of clay which have claimed the attention of investigators in recent years, none is more important than the behavior of the material when he
Jan 9, 1917
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New York Paper - Direct Electrolysis of Black-copper Anodes of High Nickel-lead Content (with Discussion)By M. H. Merriss
Some years ago, at the plant of the Baltimore Copper Smelting & Rolling Co., the receipt of large quantities of copper blister running high in lead, nickel, and arsenic resulted in the formation of a
Jan 1, 1924