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New York Paper - Importance of Hardness of Blast-Furnace Coke (with Discussion)By Owen R. Rice
Changes in coke hardness affect the working of the blast furnace, for soft coke is an obstacle to proper furnace operation. Soft coke is due to a low hydrogen-oxygen ratio in the coal charged; increas
Jan 1, 1922
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New York Paper - Critical Ranges of Some Commercial Nickel SteelsBy Howard Scott
The great advances made in mechanical engineering during recent years through the use of alloy steels, as illustrated by the development of the airplane and automobile, may be ascribed primarily to th
Jan 1, 1922
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Papers - - Production Engineering - Plug back Cementing MethodsBy C. P. Parsons
During the past year considerable interest has been shown in cementing operations for shutting off bottom water, whipstocking, etc. A number of plug-back methods have been used, with various adaptatio
Jan 1, 1936
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Concerning The Shape Of Blast Furnaces And Other Furnaces For Smelting Ores.SMELTING is a thing essential to the end for which ores are sought, for without it every ore is a useless stone. This art is especially needed by those who, drawn on by hope, have mined ores in large
Jan 1, 1942
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Philadelphia Paper - Discussion on Steel Rails. Philadelphia Meeting (65bcba21-aa05-4db5-8261-94b5d1586efc)By August Wendel
weight, and deflection, and recommends that the Pennsylvania Railroad Company denland that rails be made on specifications, based on these six variables, so narrow, that to fill them would cause the c
Jan 1, 1881
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Matte Granulation at Herculaneum, Mo.By S. Paul Lindau
THREE years ago it was decided by the management to granulate the matte that is produced in the smelter of the St: Joseph Lead Co. at Herculaneum, Mo., thereby doing away with a large amount of labor
Jan 10, 1916
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Factors In The Ignition Of Methane And Coal Dust By ExplosivesBy G. St. J. Perrott
ONE of the important hazards in coal mining is the danger of ignition of explosive mixtures of methane and air or coal dust and air, or both, by the explosives used in blasting the coal. It has long b
Jan 10, 1926
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Roanoke, Va. Paper - The Shelf Dry-KilnBy C. A. Stetefeldt
IK the dry-crushing of ores, either by stamps, rolls, or other machinery, it is essential that the material should be free from moisture. Hence a contrivance which effects this with economy, and is of
Jan 1, 1884
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Papres - Metal Mining - Mining Methods and Ore Estimations at the Hog Mountain MineBy N. O. Johnson
The Hog Mountain mine is a pyritic-gold property in the north central part of Tallapoosa County, Alabama, at an elevation of 800 ft. in the southern Appalachian region. It is 13 miles by a good second
Jan 1, 1937
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Texas, Exclusive Of The Gulf CoastBy F. Julius Fohs
TAKING into consideration the present state of geologic knowledge and present economic status of the oil industry, we have attempted to outline the six principal districts in which oil occurs and new
Jan 3, 1924
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Mining Coal By The Stripping Method, With Particular Reference To The Operations Of The Enos Coal Mining Co., Oakland City, IndianaBy Fred McConnell
FROM beginning to end, the processes of coal stripping are of great interest. From the time the prospector enters upon the property to examine it and to prove it, until the coal is loaded into railroa
Jan 1, 1931
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A New Method Of Separating Materials Of Different Specific GravitiesBy Thomas Chance
ALL gravity methods for the separation of ore from gangue, or of slate and other refuse from coal, are based upon differences in the falling velocities, in some fluid medium such as air or water, of t
Jan 2, 1918
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Institute of Metals Division - Influence of Modulus on the Temperature Dependence of the Activation Energy for Creep at High TemperaturesBy Craig R. Barrett, Alan J. Ardell, Oleg D. Sherby
It is shown that the apparent activation energy for creep of pure poly crystalline metals increases with increasing temperature in the temperature range 0.5 to 1.0 of the absolute melting temperature.
Jan 1, 1964
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Industrial Minerals - Some Aspects of the Physical Chemistry of Potash Recovery by Solar Evaporation of BrinesBy P. Hadzeriga
There are two places in the world where potash, trade name for potassium chloride, is economically recovered from naturally occurring brines by solar evaporation. One is at the Dead Sea and the other
Jan 1, 1964
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Biographical Notice - Died in Service - William T. Hallthose who are to lie in the torn fields of France. Today we read of Lieut. William Hague, whom we said good-by to hardly more than a month ago-—so clean, ao young, so strong—who, abandoning the profes
Jan 1, 1920
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New York Paper - Notes on Hydraulic Forging as practiced at the Imperial State Railway Works, Vienna, AustriaBy W. P. Blake
Forging under the hydraulic press, which was introduced by Haswell in the year 1861, at the machine shops of the Imperial State Railway Company of Austria, has since been greatly improved, so that at
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Quartz Crystal As A Mineral ResourceBy Robert B. McCormick
WORLD WAR II has developed a use for the nonmetal mineral quartz crystal that was unknown in World War I. During the interim period of peace, experimental work in the radio field with the piezoelectri
Jan 1, 1945
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Non-ferrous Metallurgy and Metallography - Refining and Melting Some Platinum Metals (with Discussion)By J. O. Whiteley, C. Dietz
It is difficult to give a refining outline that may be followed for any and all combinations of the platinum metals; different combinations require different methods of attack. This paper does not pre
Jan 1, 1928
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New York Paper - The Scoria Process for the Manufacture of Fine-Ore Briquettes, Flue-Dust Briquettes, and Slag Brick for Building Purposes (with Discussion)By Ernest Stütz
The problem of increasing blast-furnace efficiency through diminution of flue-dust production while operating with burdens consisting largely of fine ores has of recent years attracted the attention o
Jan 1, 1914
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Concerning The Method Of Refining Silver With The Cupel And Of Making Exact Assays Of The Silver And Gold Contained In Masses Of Metals.ALTHOUGH I have already described to you the procedure for making assays of the ores (a thing that is not very different from what I wish to describe in the present chapter), I shall repeat it in subs
Jan 1, 1942