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The Safety Of Underground Electrical InstallationsBy C. M. Means
CONSIDERING the hazard involved in mining operations, statistics show, that a very small percentage of accidents is chargeable to electricity. These accidents do represent quite a large percentage of
Jan 4, 1914
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Technical Note - Mobile In-Pit Crushing - Product Of Evolutionary ChangeBy E. M. Frizzell
Introduction In 1956, the first mobile crusher was installed in a limestone quarry in Hover, Germany. These early mobile crushers solved the problem of wet and soft ground conditions that did not p
Jan 1, 1986
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Elimination of the Twelve-hour Day in the Steel IndustryALTHOUGH the committee appointed by the President of the American Iron and Steel Insti-tute, to consider the twelve-hour day work in the steel industry and report conclusions and recommenda-tions, has
Jan 6, 1923
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Birmingham Paper - Byproduct Coking in Alabama (with Discussion)By F. W. Miller
Prior to the Civil War, there were several small charcoal furnaces for smelting the brown limonite ore that is found, in comparatively small bodies, throughout the central and north-central portions o
Jan 1, 1925
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Method Of Curtailing Forces At The Copper QueenBy Charles Willis
THE problem of the curtailment of forces in large numbers does not often come to employment departments and is, therefore, a problem that many departments are not prepared to handle intelligently. Tho
Jan 9, 1919
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Developments in Tennessee in 1938By Kendall E. Born
PRoduction of crude oil in Tennessee during 1938 was slightly more than 41,000 bbl., an increase of about 5000 bbl. over 1937. The production by counties and by fields is shown in Table 1. The incr
Jan 1, 1939
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Papers - Secondary Metals - Recovery of Waste from Tin-base Babbitting OperationBy P. J. Potter
Practically all tin-base babbitt metals used in engine bearings are made to customers' specifications, which are many and varied. The copper ranges from 3 to 8 per cent. and the antimony from 4 t
Jan 1, 1930
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The Briquetting of Anthracite CoalBURKE BAKER, Philadelphia, Pa. (written discussion*).-The small briquetting plant of the American Briquet Co., at 25th Street and Washington Ave., Philadelphia, was built primarily as a demonstration
Jan 3, 1918
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Electricity in Oil Fields - Use of Electricity in the Mid-Continent Field (with Discussion)By D. L. Johnson
Only general treatment of a subject of such scope can be given in a short paper, therefore, except in a few instances, statistics and descriptions of specific installations are omitted. The earlier
Jan 1, 1928
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Technical Papers and Notes - Institute of Metals Division - Hardness or Single Crystals of High-Purity Alpha TitaniumBy J. L. Gissy, G. H. Schippereit, J. B. Schroder
THE existence of mechanical anisotropy in hexagonal metals is well known.' One possible method of measuring the degree of anisotropy in a metal is to make hardness measurements on the different p
Jan 1, 1959
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Automatic Filter at DepueBy G. S. Brooks
DURING the past few years, the Mineral Point Zinc Co. has had under consideration the improvement of various types of gas-filtering apparatus used in the removal of dust from crushing and milling plan
Jan 11, 1917
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Lead-Matte Converting At TooeleBy Oscar Kuchs
IN January and February of the current year, at the Tooele plant of the International Smelting Co., Tooele, Utah, a modification of the usual method of converting, for the treatment of copper-lead mat
Jan 7, 1914
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The Changing Economics Of Surface Mining- A Case HistoryBy R. Ward Grosz
The Robinson mining district in east-central Nevada is itself a century of study in the changing economics of the mining business. It began as a boom and bust area. In the district today, just west of
Jan 1, 1969
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Arizona Paper - Coöperative Effort in Mining (with Discussion)By Joseph P. Hodgson
Since about 70 per cent. of the total cost of mining is due to underground work which is out of sight, it is essential that expenditures should be made here to the best advantage. A great many mistake
Jan 1, 1917
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Inclusions And Their Effect On Impact Strength Of Steel, IIBy A. B. Kinzel
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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Review of the Month (88c4dbd9-5341-463d-9063-4c38b249ec08)THE FRENCH occupation of the Ruhr valley and other districts on the eastern side of the Rhine continued during March to be the pre-dominating feature in European affairs. There were sporadic troubles
Jan 4, 1923
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Metal Recovery From Bronze Foundry Slags (fa33e5f5-5c32-4b04-8b6a-a8b13989939e)By Ernest Darby
WHEN bronze is melted in open-flame furnaces a considerable amount of slag is formed during the melting operation. This slag may be incidental to the melting practice or it may be formed intentionally
Jan 1, 1928
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Relationship O F Physical And Chemical Properties Of CopperBy Frank Antisell
CERTAIN physical and chemical properties of copper are so intimately related that a change in variation of the physical properties indicates a certain chemical change. The standard specifications of c
Jan 1, 1920
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Atlanta, Ga Paper - Note on Certain Water-Worn Vein-SpecimensBy F. C. Holman
It is desired in these notes to record a vein-phenomenon certainly unique in the writer's limited experience, and, as it seems to him, sufficiently rare to be worthy of mention. In the little
Jan 1, 1896
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Wet High-Intensity Magnetic Separation Of Industrial MineralsBy W. P. Dyrenforth, W. E. Horst
Although, separating or concentrating minerals, based on differences in. their magnetic properties has been practiced for years1 the early industrial applications of magnetic separators were involved
Jan 1, 1971