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Papers - - Petroleum Economics - Related Trends in Future Domestic and Foreign Petroleum Operations (TP 2048, Petr. Tech., July 1946)By H. W. Page
Petroleum requirements since V-J day have been appreciably higher than predicted. Foreign operations now exceed maximum wartime levels by about 14 per cent. Domestic operations since V-J day have aver
Jan 1, 1947
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Slime Agitation And Solution Replacement Methods At The West End Mill, Tonopah, Nev.By Jay Carpenter
THIS paper deals with only one step in the treatment of ore at the West End mill; not because the other steps are repetitions of practice in other mills, but because in this particular step there is i
Jan 8, 1915
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Problems Of Total Operation In SteelmakingBy William C. Marshall, Frank G. Norris
THE term "total operation" is meant to include problems that cannot be answered from the standpoint of either the blast furnace or the open hearth separately but must be studied by considering the int
Jan 1, 1943
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Papers - Critical Studies of a Modified Ledebur Method for Determination of Oxygen in Steel, II (With Discussion)By B. M. Larsen, W. E. Shenk, T. E. Brower
Shortly after our previous paper on this subject was printed1 we located a source of uncertainty in the results arising from the unexpected fact that hydrogen slowly reduces silica at 1100" C. in pres
Jan 1, 1934
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Papers - Flotation - Solubility Product and Rubble Attachment in Flotation (T. P. 2078, Min. Tech., Sept. 1946)By M. D. Hassialis, A. F. Taggart
ark' observed some years ago that collector-coating reactions with xanthates and with fatty acids clearly follow paths parallel to those prescribed by the familiar mass-action law for reactions i
Jan 1, 1947
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Minerals Beneficiation - Reagent Control in FlotationBy C. H. Bushell, M. Malnarich
REAGENT control in flotation is more an art than a science. Operators vary the amount of reagents used according to the metallurgy obtained. The amount of collector may be increased, for example, if t
Jan 1, 1957
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Unit Processes - The Unit Processes of Chemical Metallurgy (Metals Tech., June 1948, TP 2363) (With discussion)By R. Schuhmann
The expression "unit process " comes up with increasing frequency in discussions among metallurgists and mineral engineers, especially among those concerned with training the next generation. The unit
Jan 1, 1949
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PART III - Switching Characteristics of Small-Geometry Thin-Film SuperconductorsBy B. G. Slay, J. P. Pritchard, J. T. Pierce
A short discission is given of the cryotron us a supercozductitzg- switch. The parameters of interest such as gaiz, critical gate current, critical control current, and critical surface current densit
Jan 1, 1967
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Production - Domestic - Development in the California Oil Industry during 1942By V. H. Wilhelm
Developments in California during 1942 were marked by many difficulties in operation, of which the lack of labor and material were the main factors in slowing down work. During the many years of curta
Jan 1, 1943
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Method Of Testing Draeger Oxygen Helmets At The Copper Method Of Testing Draeger Oxygen Helmets At The Copper Queen Mine.By C. A. Mitke
(Butte Meeting, August, 1913.) 1. Character of Gases which Caused Helmets to Get Out of Order. DURING September, -1911, the fire area in the Lowell mine continually increased and gases resulting fro
Jan 7, 1913
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Significance Of Fluid Level In Oil-Well PumpingBy Lester Uren
The fluid level maintained in wells pumped for oil is an important factor in deter-mining their productivity but one that has received little attention in the literature relating to petroleum-producti
Jan 2, 1925
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Cleveland Paper - The Mount Morgan Mine, QueenslandBy T. A. Rickard
Among the gold-deposits discovered in recent vears none is more extraordinary in richness or interesting in structure than that of the famous mine at Mount Morgan. At a time when but few Australian mi
Jan 1, 1892
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Papers - Engineering Research - Pressure Distribution in Oil and Gas Reservoirs by Membrane Analogy (With Discussion)By Aaron J. Miles, Eugene A. Stepenson
The pressure distribution in a producing oil or gas reservoir has been obtained mathematically in a limited number of special cases where the boundary of the reservoirs are simple geometric figures wi
Jan 1, 1938
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Brakes for the Mineral IndustryBy George Smith
IN discussing present-day business and industrial troubles we easily drop into the habit of clinical diagnosis. Talk of this kind, with its emphasis on suspicious symptoms and abnormal tendencies, mak
Jan 8, 1928
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Reservoir Engineering - The Effect of Withdrawal Rate on the Uniformity of Edgewater lntrusionBy M. Muskat
Calculations are reported on the differential sensitivity of the updip invasion of oil strata of varving permeability to the driving pressure differential. It is assumed that the water-oil interfaces
Jan 1, 1951
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Technical Notes - A Method for Neutron Derived Porosity Determination for Thin BedsBy A. L. Simpson, J. M. Edwards
The application of the Scintillometer to radioactivrty surveys in boreholes of oil wells has made it possible to determine bed thickness with a high degree of accuracy. This fact, combined with known
Jan 1, 1956
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Minerals Beneficiation - Progress Report on Grinding at Tennessee Copper CompanyBy J. F. Myers, F. M. Lewis
The paper reports the development of a large, slow speed ball mill closed circuited with a hvdro-scillator. This increased grinding efficiency 28 pct over conventional units. AS the title indicates
Jan 1, 1951
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Cleveland Paper - What is Steel?By A. L. Holley
The general usage of engineers, manufacturers, and merchants, is gradually, bat surely, fixing the answer to this question. In every country rails, boiler-plates, and machinery bars, whether hard or s
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Current And Future Status Of Surface MiningBy Paul T. Allsman
1.1-1. Current Status. The history of surface mining is essentially that of mining coal, copper, and iron ores, and the nonmetallic minerals--clays, gypsum, phosphate rock, sand, gravel, and stone. Ta
Jan 1, 1968
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On the Relation Between the Speed and Effectiveness of StampsBy R. W. Raymond
THE question, what is the best proportion among weight, fall, and speed of stamps, is one which has not yet received thorough and systematic examination. In considering the economical application of s
Jan 1, 1873