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Reservoir Engineering - General - Production of Water-Driven Reservoirs below their Bubble PointBy A. B. Dyes
In the operation of a water-driven reservoir, a free gas saturation can he established by maintaining production rates fast enough to cause the reservoir pressure to decline below the bubble point. Th
Jan 1, 1955
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Rochester Paper - Gas Absorption and Oxidation of Non-ferrous Metals (with Discussion)By B. Woyski
Many writers, in discussing defects caused by oxidation and gassing of bronzes and red brasses advocate substantially the same cure for both. But from its nature, oxidation cannot take place if there
Jan 1, 1923
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Mining Technology In 1966 - New Technology, Innovations And Operations Set Strong Pace - Underground MiningBy P. J. G. duToit
The continually growing shortage of skilled underground miners, the escalating costs of labor, supplies and equipment, and the indisputable example of "what can be done" by our friends in the space-tr
Jan 2, 1967
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Zinc - New Electrolytic Zinc Plant of the American Zinc Company of Illinois (Metals Technology, Aug. 1942)By L. P. Davidson
The new electrolytic zinc plant of the American Zinc Company of Illinois commenced operation in April 1941. The simple flowsheet using the standard current density and the economic reasons that dictat
Jan 1, 1944
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Characterization Of Mineral SurfacesBy R. Hogg
INTRODUCTION As mineral particles are made smaller and smaller, it follows that their surfaces assume a greater and greater importance. In the extreme, the colloidal systems are characterized by th
Jan 1, 1980
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Geology Of The Hayden Creek Lead Mine, Southeast MissouriBy Ernest L. Ohle
IN 1943 diamond drilling from the surface in an area 2 miles southwest of Leadwood, Mo., discovered a lead deposit of a markedly different character from the usual southeast Missouri type. Subsequent
Jan 1, 1952
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Papers - Steelmaking - Observations in the Making and Use of Sulphite-treated Steels (T.P. 1476)By L. G. Graper, E. L. Ramsey
The present program of increased production of armament and lend-lease material for mechanized war has created a problem for the shops that must do the machining. They have naturally turned to the ste
Jan 1, 1942
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Trend Of Development In The Wrought Iron IndustryBy James Aston
THE origin of wrought iron may be taken as coincident with the earliest record of ferrous products. The limitations of primitive methods of manufacture undoubtedly resulted in a material conforming to
Jan 10, 1926
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New York Paper - Future Demands on Oil Industry of United States (with Discussion)By Joseph E. Pogue
In 1920, 531 million barrels of crude petroleum were coi~sumed in the United States. As imposing as this figure is, the fact that the domestic consumption of crude petroleum has increased at an averag
Jan 1, 1923
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Engineering Reasearch - Nature of Hastings Drilling Mud by Supercentrifuge and X-ray Analysis (Petr. Tech.; Nov. 1942)By F. C. Oliphant, George H. Fancher
Two samples of drilling mud from the Hastings oil field, Texas, were tested, and the solids in each were separated into small fractions of a limited range in particle size. The mineral composition of
Jan 1, 1943
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Influence Of Geophysics And Geochemistry On The Professional Training Of GeologistsBy W. C. Krumbein
GEOLOGICAL problems are approached from a geometrical (space relations) viewpoint, a kinematical (time sequence) viewpoint, or a dynamical viewpoint. The first two require sound training in convention
Jan 1, 1941
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The Mechanical Work Performed in Heating the BlastBy B. W. Prof. Frazier
(Read at the Wilkes-Barre Meeting, May, 1877.) THIS interesting application of the laws of thermodynamics to metallurgical practice has not been discussed by any writer, within my reading, except t
Jan 1, 1878
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Wilkes-Barre Paper - The Mechanical Work Performed in Heating the BlastBy B. W. Frazier
This interesting application of the laws of thermodynamics to metallurgical practice has not been discussed by any writer, within my reading, except the late Prof. Callon of Paris. In his Cours de Mac
Jan 1, 1879
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Principles Of Flotation-Flotation Of Cassiterite And Associated MineralsBy J. Rogers, H. F. A. Hergt, K. L. Sutherland
IN 1938 Ralston4 reviewed the many attempts to find a satisfactory collector for the separation of cassiterite from its ores and in 1944 Dean and Ambrose2 summarized some further attempts. Generally,
Jan 1, 1947
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Reservoir Engineering - General - Displacement of Oil from Porous Media by Miscible LiquidsBy J. Offeringa, C. van der Poel
The report describes scaled model experiments on the recovery of oil from porous sands by the injection of miscible liquids [solvents] and the subsequent recovery of the solvents by water flooding. Sp
Jan 1, 1955
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Reservoir Engineering–General - Heat Transfer Rates and Temperature Fields for Underground Storage TanksBy S. W. Churchill
A digital computer was used to obtain an exact numerical solution for the transient behavior of the insulation and earth adjacent to an isothermal, submerged flat surface for a single set of parametri
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Discovery of the Flambeau Deposit, Rusk County, Wisconsin – A Geophysical Case HistoryBy Carl G. Schwenk
Rocks of the Precambrian Shield of Rusk County, Wis., were recognized as a favorable host for volcanogenic base metal deposits by personnel of Bear Creek Mining Co. Most of the county is covered by a
Jan 1, 1977
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New York Paper - New Developments in High-strength Aluminum Alloys (with Discussion)By Robert S. Archer, Zay Jeffries
It is about fifteen years since the development in Germany, largely by Alfred Wilm, of the aluminum alloy called duralumin. In this alloy, combining as it does the tensile strength of mild steel with
Jan 1, 1925
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Stope Blasting Design and Experience at the Carr Fork MineBy Dan Crackel, G. G. Ramos, Mark Heisel
INTRODUCTION Feasibility studies indicated that a cratering type stoping method was best suited to the character of the first ore block at Carr Fork. This method known as vertical crater retreat (
Jan 1, 1981
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Drilling Fluids and Cement - A Ten-Pound Cement Slurry for Oil WellsBy Roscoe C. Clark, Henry F. Coffer, J. J. Reynolds
A cement slurry lightweight additive has been adapted in the Conoco laboratories for use in oil well cements. This additive makes possible the use of air to lighten oil well cement slurries. Specifica
Jan 1, 1955