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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas in Michigan during 1936By Theron Wasson
During 1936 the state of Michigan produced 11,868,573 bbl. This is approximately 4,000,000 bbl. less than produced in 1935. The principle reason for the decrease in production over the previous year w
Jan 1, 1937
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Papers - Reserves and Mining - Symposium on Grouting - Solidifying Mines and Shafts Areas by Pressure GroutingBy B. H. Mot
Underground water has been one of the greatest problems in sinking mine shafts, sealing existing shafts, and driving headings under streams. In the preparation of a proposed shaft or existing shafts f
Jan 1, 1949
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Institute of Metals Division - Discussion: Temperature Dependence of Steady-State Creep in a Dispersion-Strengthened Indium-Glass CompositeBy G. Ansell, J. Weertman
G. Ansell and J. Weertman (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and Northwestern University, respectively) —The great increase in creep strength that you found in your indium-glass composites is quite str
Jan 1, 1964
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Abstracts of Papers Presented in Drill Steel Sessions New York Meeting - The Ideal Drill SteelBy Frank H. Kingdon
and eventually we would have trouble. That is, these little localized overstresses may not be important if the structure is loaded a few times, but may be important if the structure is loaded many tho
Jan 1, 1922
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Institute of Metals Division - Anomalous Thermal Stability of Al-CuAl2 Eutectic Specimens (TN)By D. L. Albright, R. W. Kraft, J. A. Ford
HE unidirectional solidification of A1-CuAl, eutec-tic specimens to produce an essentially parallel lamellar structure has been described previously.' Ingots solidified in this manner ordinarily
Jan 1, 1963
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Papers - Magnetic Methods - Polar Charts for Interpreting Magnetic Anomalies (Contrib. 91)By Sylvain J. Pirson
The main value of earth magnetic measurements, outside of certain mining problems, resides in the study of deeply buried tectonic phenomena related to regional and local geology. Magnetic surveys are
Jan 1, 1940
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Papers - Magnetic Methods - Polar Charts for Interpreting Magnetic Anomalies (Contrib. 91)By Sylvain J. Pirson
The main value of earth magnetic measurements, outside of certain mining problems, resides in the study of deeply buried tectonic phenomena related to regional and local geology. Magnetic surveys are
Jan 1, 1940
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After Two Centuries of Mining Cornwall Keeps Its Methods Up-to-DateBy S. J. Shale
Recent changes at Cornwall are highlighted by development of a panel caving method, with slushing drifts, for underground practice as open pit operation nears close. Metallurgy keeps the pace with hig
Jan 7, 1953
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Halifax Paper - The Pictou Coal-FieldBy Henry S. Poole
This field is geologically of much interest. It is small, hut with some seams of unusual thickness, the main one being as much as thirty-eight feet thick. The quality of the seams, as also of the asso
Jan 1, 1886
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Buffalo Paper - Notes on the Operation of a Light Mineral RailroadBy James Douglas
As the operation of light railroads is important to the mining industry, the following statistics of the Arizona Southeastern Railroad may be of interest. When the traffic of the Bisbee copper-mine
Jan 1, 1899
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Analysis Of Performance Of Coal JigBy H. F. Yancey
THE jig may be termed the standard coal-washing machine. Although exact figures on the relative tonnages of coal treated by the various coal-cleaning processes are not available, it is known that a la
Jan 4, 1925
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Osmosis As A Factor In Ore-FormationBy Halbert Powers Gillette
FROM the known laws of physical chemistry I believe it can be shown that progressive mass movement of water solutions in channels has seldom been the means of ore-concentration in veins. It is my purp
Jan 1, 1913
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Engineering Reasearch - Effects of Certain Gums and Starches on Filtration of Salt-water Muds at Elevated Temperatures (Per. January 1943) (with discussion)By Benjamin C. Craft, Frank Perkins
The wall-building properties of salt-water muds can be maintained at high temperatures by additions of gum karaya, gum ghatti, gelatinized starch, or commercially prepared starch. A germicide should b
Jan 1, 1943
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Engineering Reasearch - Effects of Certain Gums and Starches on Filtration of Salt-water Muds at Elevated Temperatures (Per. January 1943) (with discussion)By Benjamin C. Craft, Frank Perkins
The wall-building properties of salt-water muds can be maintained at high temperatures by additions of gum karaya, gum ghatti, gelatinized starch, or commercially prepared starch. A germicide should b
Jan 1, 1943
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Some Postwar Problems In Geological Engineering EducationBy W. T. Thom
ALL engineering education is faced by certain basic problems, three of which seem to have particular present importance in geological engineering training in general, and in respect to training for oi
Jan 1, 1947
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Teaching Geophysics in a Department of PhysicsBy David Keys
APPLIED geophysics is the youngest child of that old branch of learning, that has been known from Aristotle's time as physics-the constitution and laws of nature. The mother science, with the hel
Jan 1, 1938
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Mechanization Studied at KnoxvilleTHROUGH the courtesy of the Southern Appala-chian Coal Operators' Association, a joint meeting of the Southern Appalachian Efficiency Associa-tion and local members of the A. I. M. E. and A. S. M
Jan 12, 1927
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Reservoir Engineering - General - Calculation of Unsteady-State Gas Flow within a Square Drainage AreaBy Jim Douglas, H. H. Rachford, D. W. Peaceman
The problem of unsteady-state gas flow through porous media has been solved numerically only for the case of linear or radially symmetric reservoirs. A recently introduced numerical method for solving
Jan 1, 1956
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Physical Metallurgy - The Orientation Texture at the Surface of Cast Metals (Metals Technology,By Gerald Edmunds
In a paper1 before this Institute in 1940, the writer reported that the surface orientation texture of zinc and cadmium differed from the texture existing within the casting, in that basal planes were
Jan 1, 1945
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Oxidant Effectiveness in In-Situ Uranium LeachingBy Richard Schellinger, Ronald H. Carlson, Robert D. Norris
INTRODUCTION A very important key to the success of an in-situ leach venture is proper choice of well field chemistry, in which type and concentration of oxidant plays a significant role. For prop
Jan 1, 1980