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Postwar Products Planning and Raw Materials SourcesBy Clyde E. Williams
IN planning a postwar program for manufactured products, it is essential that the bases for the plans be wisely chosen. First we must make certain assumptions as to the war's ending. Let us assum
Jan 1, 1943
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Petroleum Exploration and Development in WartimeBy E. DeGolyer
WAR has wrought sharp and sudden changes in the pattern of the oil industry. The most obvious and most striking of such changes have been in the fields of transportation and refining. A third of the
Jan 1, 1943
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How to Improve Your InstituteBy AIME AIME
HEREWITH is presented a preliminary report of a special committee, consisting of Erle V. Daveler, Paul D. Merica, and C. H. Mathewson (chairman), dealing with sundry matters of which many are of vital
Jan 1, 1943
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Will Our Aluminum Plants Be Postwar White Elephants?By AIME AIME
BY the end of 1943, the United States will be able to produce aluminum at a rate of 1,150,000 tons a year. How much aluminum is 1,150,000 tons? It is sufficient to replace every railroad passenger car
Jan 1, 1943
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A Century and a Half of Development Behind the Adirondack Iron Mining IndustryBy J. R. Linney
A HISTORY of the ore-mining and iron-smelting industry of the Adirondacks comprises a century and a half of pioneering by rugged individualists, both men and women. By geographical location, the clima
Jan 1, 1943
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IC 7209 Findings from Major Studies of FatigueBy R. R. Sayers
Under compuision of the present urgency to implement the President's promise to make the United States the arsenal for the democracies there is a tendency to demand a relaxation of restrictions on hou
Jun 1, 1942
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RI 3631 Methods of Allaying Dust in Underground Mining OperationsBy C. Watson Owings
"The mining Industry in the United States is becoming fully cognizant of the hazards of dust in underground mining as well as in surface plants. The dust problem in metal mines has been brought to foc
Apr 1, 1942
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RI 3638 Some Photometric Instruments Used in X-Ray Diffraction and Spectrographic Methods of AnalysisBy HOWARD I. OSHRY, James W. Ballard, H. H. Schrenk
Photometric instruments were designed and built for use with X- ray and spectrographic apparatus for the investigation and analysis of a variety of materials of hygienic interest . The instruments are
Apr 1, 1942
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RI 3627 Progress Report - Metallurgical Division 51. Cinnabar-Reduction Plants of the Southwestern Arkansas Quicksilver DistrictBy S. M. Shelton, W. A. Calhoun
"INTRODUCTION Discovery and development of a southwestern Arkansas quicksilver district are recent history. In July 1930 4/, a specimen was discovered near the Little Missouri River in sec. 1, T. 7S.
Mar 1, 1942
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RI 3625 Manganese Investigations - Metallurgical Division 8. Pyrometallurgial Studies of Manganese OresBy J. A. Pile, Virgil Miller, R. G. Peterson, F. B. Petermann
"INTRODUCTION As virtually no published data are available on the sintering of fine, minus-100-mesh, ferrograde manganese ores, it is most opportune to present data on the amenability of various fine
Mar 1, 1942
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IC 7204 1942-02 Tentative coal mine inspection standards"These tentative coal mine inspection standards have been prepared as a guide for the Federal inspection of coal mines of the United States. Much time and thought have been spent by various members of
Feb 1, 1942
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Papers - Modern Mining and Beneficiation of Barite at Cartersville, Georgia (T. P. 973, with discussion)By David P. Hale
The Cartersville barite district is near Cartersville, Ga., in the southeastern part of Bartow County, about 43 miles northeast of Atlanta. The area over which active mining is being done extends abou
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - A New Graphic Presentation of Coal-cleaning Characteristics (Contribution 129)By G. A. Vissac
In the presentation which follows, wash-ability curves, such as are commonly used in making studies preliminary to the cleaning of any coal or to the concentration of any mineral, have been reduced in
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Ventilation at Mines of the Lehigh Navigation Coal Company, Inc. (T. P. 1461, with discussion)By A. T. Beckwith
The Lehigh Navigation Coal Company Inc. operates steep-pitch, relatively deep mines in the Panther Creek Valley, at the eastern end of the southern anthracite coal field. Commercially minable coal bed
Jan 1, 1942
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Concerning Arsenic, Orpiment, And Realgar.ARSENIC and orpiment are two mineral substances of a similar kind, and they are by nature pure, without admixture of other species. In regard to their apparent qualities we shall say that their compos
Jan 1, 1942
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Notes on the Operation of the Basic Copper (and Copper-Nickel) Converter (84632d02-fb20-4759-93cd-afe1b1bbb666)By Anton Gronningsater
MR. J. R. GORDON: The authors are to be congratulated for their excellent papers on Copper-Nickel Matte Converting. Mr. Drummond's paper contains the results of a thorough and exhaustive study o
Jan 1, 1942
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Dust Quantitation by Microprojection and Comparison CountingBy D. H. d Hamly
THE work of Brown and others at Pittsburgh (Brown, Baum, Yant, and Schrenk, 1938)(1) and the success of their light field microprojector (Figure 1), have shown that the microscopy of dust quantitation
Jan 1, 1942
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Ventilation At Mines Of The Lehigh Navigation Coal Company, Inc.By A. T. Beckwith
THE Lehigh Navigation Coal Company Inc. operates steep-pitch, relatively deep mines in the Panther Creek Valley, at the eastern end of the southern anthracite coal field. Commercially minable coal bed
Jan 1, 1942
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Data, "Discoveries," Knowledge Of Value, MapsWhen the writer first began his search for the early history of coal he was amazed at the paucity of information in literature about it, and while after six years many of the reasons for such a scarci
Jan 1, 1942
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Various Methods Of Making Powders In Which To Cast Bronzes In The Small Art Of Casting.IN general in making such powders, all kinds of gravel, tuff, washed river silt, and similar earths whose grain is fine and lean by nature are good for this operation of casting, either by themselves
Jan 1, 1942