Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
-
Industrial DiamondsBy F. G. ROCKWELL
ALTHOUGH the diamond as a gem stone dates back many hundreds of years its use industrially, at least to any extend is recent. The old adage: "Use a diamond to cut a diamond" indicates that some indust
Jan 1, 1944
-
New York Paper - The Effect of Aeration and “Watering Out” on the Sulphur Content of CokeBy J. R. Campbell
In order to discuss the subject intelligently, it will be necessary to touch briefly on the forms in which sulphur is supposed to exist in coking coal to be carbonized in beehive or byproduct ovens.
Jan 1, 1916
-
New York Paper - Utilization Problems of Metallurgical Limestone and Dolomite (with Discussion)By Oliver Bowles
While vast quantities of limestone and dolomite are used in metallurgy, the estimated production in 1926 being 23,860,000 tons, there are many problems connected with their use which have not received
-
Development Of A Process To Separate The Metal Values From Dental Amalgam Scrap ? SummaryBy Douglas J. Robinson
A pilot scale process has been developed to separate mercury, tin, silver, and copper from dental amalgam scrap. Laboratory research led to a process which was operated in 55 gallon drum sized reactor
Jan 1, 1984
-
New Determinations of the Coefficients of Fric¬tion of Lubricated Journals, and on the Laws Governing Such FrictionBy R. H. Thurston
THE writer became convinced, many years ago, that the generally accepted values of the coefficient of friction for lubricated surfaces were not applicable to such heavy machinery as he had been called
Jan 1, 1879
-
Discussions - Of Mr. Bordeaux's Paper on The Silver-Mines of Mexico (see Trans., xxxix., 357)A. H. Bromly, Zihuatanejo, Guerrero, Mexico (communication to the Secretary*):—The following criticism of what "is offered as a summary which may be found useful by mining engineers," is not dictated
Jan 1, 1910
-
Minnesota Granite Poses Tough Drilling ProgramBy AIME
One of the operations of the J. L. Shiely Co. is quarrying in a hard granite gneiss with intrusions of gabbro or trap. During the winter of 1948-1949 the quarry ramp was lowered about 30 ft and during
Jan 1, 1950
-
St. Joe's Pneumatic ChargerBy L. W. Casteel
St. Joseph Lead Company's Southeast Missouri mines have been successfully converted to the use of ammonium nitrate and fuel oil as a blasting agent. This is significant to the company because it
Jan 5, 1962
-
The Concentration of Iron-Ores.Discussion of the paper of N. V. Hansell, presented at the Cleveland Meeting, October, 1912, and published in Bulletin No. 72, December, 1912, pp. 1497 to 1,517. C. Q. PAYNE, New York (communication
Jan 3, 1913
-
The Use of Mud-Laden Water in Drilling WellsDiscussion -of the paper of I. N. KNAPP, presented at the New York meeting, February, 1915, and printed in Bulletin No. 96, December, 1914, pp. 2783 to 2793. A. C. LANE, Tufts College, Mass.-Is there
Jan 5, 1915
-
Braden (d44232c6-d147-4b6f-abaa-566b5f8d928b)BETWEEN the third and twentieth days of November, 1903, six intensely interesting letters were mailed from Santiago, Chile, addressed to "Mr. William Braden, Consulting Mining Engineer, 71 Broadway, N
Jan 1, 1933
-
Chattanooga Paper - The Distribution of the Elements in Igneous RocksBy Henry S. Washington
During the last twenty years or so the chemical investigation of rocks has made great advances, and it is now generally recognized that a knowledge of the chemical composition is as essential as that
Jan 1, 1909
-
Colorado And New Mexico - ColoradoRecords of coal in Colorado begin only a few years before the Civil War. In 1859 Macomb reported beds of lignite on both sides of Galisteo Creek, and in the foothills of the Placer Mountains, a place
Jan 1, 1942
-
Recent Progress In Studies Of Supergene EnrichmentBy W. H. Emmons
INTRODUCTION MINERAL deposits that have formed by the various geologic processes, when exposed to air and water at or near the surface of the earth, break down and form new compounds that are stabl
Jan 1, 1933
-
The Schumacher Briquetting Process.By Joseph W. Richards
THIS method of briquetting flue-dust, or flue-dust mixed with fine ores, or, in a few exceptional cases, coke-dust, has come into large commercial use in Europe, and a small plant is already in operat
May 1, 1912
-
New York Paper - An Early Instance of Blowing-In Without "Scaffolding-Down."By Frank Firmstone
. In the early decades of the past century the method of starting iron blast-furnaces by " scatlolding-down" seems to have been in universal use for coke-furnaces and, at least in this country, for ch
Jan 1, 1908
-
New York Paper February, 1918 - Pyrite and Pyrrhotite Resources of Ducktown, TennesseeBy Joseph H. Taylor
The Ducktown district is in the extreme southeastern corner of Tennessee, its principal railroad point being Copperhill, on the Blue Ridge division of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad, midway betwe
Jan 1, 1918
-
New York Paper - Effect of Finishing Temperatures of Rails on Their Physical Properties and Microstructure (with Discussion)By W. R. Shimer
In his valuable report on Finishing Temperatures and Properties of Rails,l Dr. G. X. Burgess, Chief of the Division of Metallurgy, U. S. Bureau of Standards, has begun a line of investigation which sh
Jan 1, 1915
-
Deep Open-Pit OptimizationBy Henri V. Reibell
Deep open pit optimization supposes very long and sedious calculations in order to assign the best shape of the pit and the best bottom level, which will give the biggest profit. Computers give the
Jan 1, 1969
-
Canada’s New Uranium Camp at Blind RiverBy Howard Steven Strouth
The Blind River mining camp in Canada is all set to stage a major revolution. Enthusiasts on the scene say it will bring large-scale mining to North American uranium operation. If orebodies already di
Jan 5, 1955