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Nuclear Chemical Mining of Primary Copper Sulfides (a65eb5be-9a4b-45d4-b1a7-dc7e5cb2d96a)By Robert L. Braun, Arthur E. Lewis
A contained nuclear explosion is proposed to produce a chimney of broken ore well below the water table. After the chimney is filled with water and reaches hydrostatic equilibrium, oxygen, under press
Jan 1, 1974
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Economics Of ProrationBy Joseph Pogue
PRORATION in the petroleum industry has come to mean a method for curtailing the production of crude petroleum by artificial effort, and it is in this sense that the term is employed throughout this p
Jan 1, 1932
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Institute of Metals Division - Flaking of Heavy Alloy Steel Sections (Discussion, p. 1306)By C. R. Garr, A. R. Troiano
FLAKING or hair-line crack formation has been a major problem confronting the producer of large alloy steel forgings.' Today it is generally conceded that hydrogen in one or more forms in allo
Jan 1, 1958
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Mine Improvements Mark Iron Range ActivityThe Empire IV expansion is on schedule for completion in January 1980; Hibbing Taconite's 2.7 million ltpy* expansion should be finished late in 1979; and Reserve Mining's tailing disposal p
Jan 3, 1979
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Statistical Interpretation of Laboratory Coal Tests and Sampling MethodsBy G. B. Gould
EVERY mathematical statement of a measure of anything (as distin-guished from a count) is followed by a qualification always implied if not explicity stated--that the statement is only an estimate, wh
Jan 1, 1937
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Pig Steel From Ore In The Electric Furnace *By Robert Keeney
AT the beginning of the use of the electric furnace, for the manufacture of calcium carbide and ferro-alloys, experimental work was conducted in it upon the production of steel from iron ore. Stassano
Jan 2, 1914
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Papers - Reserves and Mining - Pittsburgh Coal Seam in Northern West Virginia (T.P. 2425, Coal Tech., Aug. 1948, with discussion)By W. D. Steele, S. D. Brady
The Pittsburgh coal seam in West Virginia contains the largest coal reserves of any coal seam in that State and is, therefore, one of the most important seams, and attains minable thickness and purity
Jan 1, 1949
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Institute of Metals Division - The Nature of the Fiber-Texture Component in Extruded Aluminum RodsBy R. A. Vandermeer, C. J. McHargue
The (001) fiber-texture component, found in aluminum rods extruded at subzero temperatures, consists of particles of various sizes having extremely irregular shapes dispersed in a nonuniform way thro
Jan 1, 1964
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Flotation Of Mineral FinesBy K. V. S. Sastry
INTRODUCTION Flotation is by far the most important unit operation of mineral processing. Most of the common base metals are produced from flotation concentrates of metal sulfides. Flotation is pr
Jan 1, 1979
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Incipient Motion of Solids in Solid-Liquid Transport SystemBy Teh-Yu Kao, Don J. Wood
With the increasing industrial use of the method of transporting solids by fluids through pipes, a better understanding of the basic mechanics of a solid-liquid pipe flow system is essential. In this
Jan 1, 1975
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Simulation Of Closed Circuit Wet Grinding ProcessBy T. Inoue, T. Imaizumi
A simulation model has been developed to find out the possibility of improving the industrial closed-circuit wet grinding operations. The model involves a continuous tumbling mill in combination with
Jan 1, 1980
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Problems in Reclaiming Farmland in IllinoisBy Alten F. Grandt
What is prime farmland? Can such land, once it has been surface mined for coal, be restored so that it will produce corn, soybeans, wheat, and alfalfa? What methods or practices are necessary to bring
Jan 1, 1982
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Dimensional-Model Studies Of Oil-Field BehaviorBy W. B. Lewis, M. E. True, M. C. Leverett
Tars paper states the theory underlying the design of two kinds of dimensionally scaled models of parts of idealized oil fields. One of these simulates an oil well and its surrounding sand for a dista
Jan 1, 1942
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PART V - Experimental Evidence of Jet Formation During Explosion CladdingBy O. R. Bergmann
Two approaches were taken to obtain direct experimental evidence jar the existence oj a jet in the explosion-cladding pvocess: 1) direct observation of the claddirg jwocess by rtzeans ojf kig-h-speed
Jan 1, 1967
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Relative Floatability of Silicate MineralsBy John Patek
KNOWLEDGE of the relative floatability of silicate minerals is increas-ing in importance as flotation is being applied to the concentration of nonsulfides. Many silicates are in themselves commercial
Jan 1, 1934
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Mexican Paper - The District of Hidalgo Del Parral, Mexico, in 1820By Norberto Dominguez
In the year 1820 a commission, assisted by Sr. C. Fernando de Ainada, was appointed by Sr. Jose Ramon Mila de la Roca to report on the condition of the mining region of Parral, in the State of Chihuah
Jan 1, 1902
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Rheological Properties of Heavy-Media Suspensions Stabilized by Polymers and BentonitesBy Laszlo Valentyik, John T. Patton
A conventional heavy-media separation process utilizes a mixture of finely ground solids like magnetite, ferrosilicon, or shale and water. The always-present clay in the medium acts as a stabilizing a
Jan 1, 1977
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Atlanta, Ga Paper - The Effect of Washing with Water Upon the Silver Chloride in Roasted Ore (see Discussion p. 1015)By Willard S. Morse
In my paper on "The Lixiviation of Silver-Ores by the Russell Process at Aspen, Colorado" (page 137 of the present volume), attention was called to the decrease in "chlorination " during the washing o
Jan 1, 1896
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The Classification, Evaluation, and Projection of Coal Mine Roof Rocks in Advance of MiningBy David K. Hylbert
This study investigated roof falls in room-and-pillar drift coal mines in eastern Kentucky and utilized geologic methods for predicting roof conditions in advance of mining. In the Highsplint mine
Jan 12, 1978
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Production Engineering - Bottom-hole Pressures in Oil WellsBy C. V. Millikan, C. V. Sidwell
There is nothing more important in petroleum engineering than a definite knowledge of the pressure at the bottom of an oil well at any existing operating condition, and the relation of this pressure t
Jan 1, 1931