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Effect Of Rate Of Loading On Strength And Young's Modulus Of Elasticity Of RockBy Richard L. Stowe, Donnie L. Ainsworth
The static, rapid, and shock-loading response of rock is of interest to many in the field of rock mechanics. For example, the effects of loading rates on strength and stress-strain characteristics of
Jan 1, 1972
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Summary Of Committee's ReportIN THE past, we have, perhaps, been somewhat careless in our furnace practice, in the use of high-grade material, lowering the production costs through demanding high-grade ores, increasing the size o
Jan 11, 1924
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Prospects for Future Gold SupplyBy Georgc E. Collins
SEVERAL years ago, I estimated the total stock of gold in the world to be about a thousand million ounces, of which rather over one-third was available for monetary uses. Robert H. Ridgway has estimat
Jan 1, 1932
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Mineral-land ClassificationBy Max W. Ball
THE geologist or mining engineer, whose work takes him into the western United States, whether for the Government or private enterprises, is likely to be called upon to classify public lands as to the
Jan 1, 1921
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International Trade in FuelsBy E. W. Pehrson, J. W. Furness
THE method of presentation in the accompanying charts is based upon the well-known formula: production plus imports minus exports equals apparent consumption. Thus for each area for which data are sho
Jan 1, 1936
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Shaft-Sinking Practices and CostsBy J. Fred, Johnson
THIS TALK is a digest of some of the information contained in tables, one on practices and one on costs of shaft sinking, in Bulletin 357 of the U. S. Bureau of Mines written by E. D. Gardner, Supervi
Jan 1, 1933
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The Institute in Its Relation to the Mineral IndustryBy Robert E. Tally
THE membership of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers is composed largely of technicians, operating engineers, and executives in the mining, metallurgical and petroleum indust
Jan 1, 1932
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British Mark Century of Progress in Coal Mine SafetyBy V. S. Swaminathan
This year, Great Britain is looking back over a century to August 14, 1850, the day when the first "Act for the Inspection of Coal Mines" was passed in that country, an act which signaled the end of o
Jan 1, 1950
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Work Of National Safety CouncilThe Sub-committee on Safety of the Industrial Organization Com-mittee of the Institute has been asked to cooperate with the National Safety Council, and has made certain recommendations to the Board o
Jan 7, 1919
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Expanded Perlite Shows Steady Production GrowthBy Oliver S. North
Reserves of perlite rock in the western section of the United States are immense. A geological report prepared for the Union Pacific RR showed proved tonnage of over 400 million tons in southern Nevad
Jan 2, 1955
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Bauxite Mining in the United States - AlabamaBy WALTER B. JONES
IN ALABAMA there are three distinct groups of bauxite deposits, as follows: (1) Cambro-Ordovician contact with the principal-deposits located in Talla-dega, Calhoun, DeKalb, and Cherokee Counties, an
Jan 1, 1934
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Louis S. Cates And The Company's ExpansionBy Robert Glass Cleland
DURING the closing month of 1929, Walter Douglas found his health impaired by the strain of many difficult years of alternating prosperity and depression, and in April 1930 resigned the presidency of
Jan 1, 1952
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Prospecting, for the Amateur, With a Gold PanBy A. O. Bartell
Do you know that valuable clues to the geology and mineralization of a district can be found in a handful of sand from a stream bed draining the area? This handful of sand has a story to tell to those
Jan 1, 1948
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Graphical Representation of Theoretical Soluble Losses by CCDBy R. J. Woody
DESIGN of the most economic continuous counter-current decantation (CCD) circuit is based on selection of the number of stages and the wash volume that will give the minimum summation of the followin
Jan 7, 1958
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Liquid Fuel Production by Hydrogenation TodayBy AIME AIME
IN many countries the lack of liquid petroleum supplies has centered interest upon the hydrogenation of coal and coal tars for the preparation of motor fuel. In the United States, hydrogenation has be
Jan 1, 1936
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Government In Your HairBy Richard W. Smith
Why are we losing our liberties? (1) . . . because our local chambers of commerce come to the National Chamber's annual meeting, vote for a policy on federal economy, and then go to Capitol Hill
Jan 1, 1949
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21. The Upper Mississippi Valley Base-Metal DistrictBy Allen V. Heyl
This old district is a major zinc and lead source and minor copper and barite source. Ores are chiefly in the Galena Dolomite and in limestones and dolomites of the Decorah and Platteville Formations,
Jan 1, 1968
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Wednesday Morning Session, April 24, 1940 - MinutesBy AIME AIME
I am happy to welcome you to the twenty-third conference of the National Open-Hearth Committee, and our joint conference with the Blast Furnace Committee, of the American Institute of Mining and Metal
Jan 1, 1940
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New Records in Driving a Single-Heading TunnelBy S. O. ANDROS
RECORDS in mining operations naturally fall when improved equipment and methods are developed. And tunneling through the Continental Divide is a mining operation, even though the tunnel was not driven
Jan 1, 1934
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Recataloging the World's Largest Technical LibraryBy HARRISON W. CRAVER
THE principal purposes of library-catalogs are to enable a reader to find a book of which the author, the title, or the subject is known; to show what the library has. by a given author, or on a given
Jan 1, 1920