Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
-
Bethlehem's Cambria Coal Cleaning PlantBy William Benzon
Bethlehem Steel's Cambria Division coal cleaning and preparation plant, operated by Bethlehem Mines Corp., is located in Cambria County, Pa., about 2 ½ miles southeast of Ebensburg. Here, above
Jan 12, 1965
-
Kennecott's Delayed Blasting Technique Cuts Costs, Improves Pit StabilityBy Gene D. Clayton, Robert R. Dimock
A time-consuming and expensive preshearing program to minimize the adverse effects of blasting on slope stability at Kennecott Copper Corp.'s Ruth Pit in east-central Nevada has been eliminated i
Jan 4, 1977
-
Technical Papers and Discussions - Powder Metallurgy - (Powder Metallurgy Seminar) (Metals Tech., Aug. 1948) (C. G. Goetzel presiding)26. G. H. S. Price, S. V. Williams, and G. J.O. Garrard: Heavy alloy, its production. properties and uses. Metal Industry (1941) 599 354s 372. 394. 27. R. Kieffer and W. Hoto
Jan 1, 1949
-
Industry Cannot Get Along Without Platinum MetalsBy Fred E. Carter
AT first sight, the platinum group of metals seem of little import to we, the people," although actually the life of the common man is much influenced by them; this influence is usually indirect, henc
Jan 1, 1944
-
Equipment - Surface Indicating Pressure, Temperature and Flow EquipmentBy M. B. Riordan
A surface indicating pressure, temperature and flow instrument that ernploys variable frequency sensing elements has proved useful in evaluating flow characteristics of wells. Relative productivity of
Jan 1, 1951
-
Equipment - Surface Indicating Pressure, Temperature and Flow EquipmentBy M. B. Riordan
A surface indicating pressure, temperature and flow instrument that ernploys variable frequency sensing elements has proved useful in evaluating flow characteristics of wells. Relative productivity of
Jan 1, 1951
-
Some Aspects of Corrosion FatigueBy T. S. Fuller
THE work of D. J. McAdam1,2 at the U. S. Naval Engineering Experiment Station, Annapolis, Md., on what has been called by him "corrosion fatigue" has focussed the attention of the engineering professi
Jan 1, 1929
-
Birmingham Paper - Blast-furnace Practice in Alabama (with Discussion)By H. E. Mussey
When the American Institute of Mining Engineers visited the Birmingham district in May, 1888, the four Ensley furnaces (Fig. 1) then completed were referred to as monumental.' Their dim
Jan 1, 1925
-
Institute of Metals Division - Twinning and Fracture in Tungsten Single Crystals at Room TemperatureBy Ursula E. Wolff
Il.lechanica1 twins have been observed in brigsten single crystals of a variety of axial orientations defornzed at room temperature in tension or bending. The twins formed near the final fracture and
Jan 1, 1962
-
Discussion of Papers Published Prior to 1955 - Depth Determinations by Electrical Resistivity (1954) 199, p. 915The paper describes a cyclic method for processing manganese ores using sodium sulphate as the basic reagent. Sodium sulphate is electrolyzed in a diaphragm cell to give an anolyte sodium sulphate aci
Jan 1, 1956
-
Opinion - From Ore To Metal- A Professional Entity Is NeededBy H. Rush Spedden
When Robert H. Richards wrote Ore Dressing, the famous four-volume work published in the first decade of this century, the ore dresser was still largely concerned, with the mechanical treatment of ore
Jan 1, 1971
-
Discussion of Papers Published Prior to 1955 - Electrolytic Production of Hydrometallurgical Reagents for Processing Manganese Ores [The article from which this abstract is reprinted appears in Trans. A.l.M.E. (1955) 203, p. 51; Journal of MBy J. Bruce Clemmer, P. E. Churchward, Carl Rompacek
The paper describes a cyclic method for processing manganese ores using sodium sulphate as the basic reagent. Sodium sulphate is electrolyzed in a diaphragm cell to give an anolyte sodium sulphate aci
Jan 1, 1956
-
Uranium Occurrences Of The United StatesBy Thomas N. Walthier
ROSPECTING for uranium in the East is hampered by the lack of bedrock exposure due to extensive overburden and residual soil. But, despite the problems of this physiographic province, it has not been
Jun 1, 1955
-
Production of Uranium MetalBy E. S. Noe, D. S. Arnold, C. E. Polson
Reactors of today and tomorrow require a high uniformity of their fuel elements despite the wide variety of uranium raw materials from the far corners of the earth. To meet these quality standards met
Jun 1, 1956
-
Mine Land IrrigationBy J. Kinkead, R. M. Sherman, E. M. Frizzel
A recent research study performed under US Bureau of Mines Contract No. J0199088 "Modular Irrigation Equipment for Reclaimed Strip Mined Lands" investigated the feasibility of irrigation as a reclamat
Jan 1, 1983
-
Part VII - Communications - Problems in the Preparation of Vanadium-Hydrogen Alloys for Transmission Electron MicroscopyBy D. G. Westlake
THE structure observed in thin foils by transmission electron microscopy is not necessarily representative of the initial bulk material. We have shown that hydrogen, originally present in a specimen o
Jan 1, 1968
-
Quantitative Mineralogy As A Guide In ExplorationBy W. M. Tuddenham, R. J. P. Lyon
In many areas surrounding the orebodies in mining districts rocks have been bleached and altered by the ore-forming solutions and have been oxidized during later weathering processes. A number of the
Jan 12, 1959
-
Amphoteric Surfactants as Flotation CollectorsBy R. W. Smith, C. Schroeder, R. Haddenham
Amphoteric surfactants are heteropolar organic compounds which possess at least two functional (ionic) oppositely charged groups per molecule. The ones studied are manufactured by General Mills and po
Jan 1, 1974
-
Florida Paper - A Water-Cooling Apparatus (see Discussion p. 960)By Carl Henrich
In the planning and erection of smelting-works, especially of such as contain the modern large water-jacketed blast-furnaces, we are often confronted with an insufficiency in the watersupply. It may b
Jan 1, 1896
-
Industrial Limestone Resources Along The Ohio River Valley Of KentuckyBy Garland R. Dever, Preston McGrain, George W. Ellsworth
Abstract-Limestone resources for industrial, constructional, and agricultural uses occur on the surface and at minable depths in several areas along the Ohio River and its navigable tributaries in Ken
Jan 4, 1978