Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Shaft Sinking through Soft MaterialBy Edward Sayre
IN shaft sinking for coal mines, the cost item greatly influences the method adopted. This holds true especially when soft material must be traversed. The average life of a coal mine is short. This is
Jan 9, 1916
-
Engineering Evaluation of Coal Refuse Slurry Impoundments (TRANSACTIONS - VOL. 258)By Robert L. Zook, Bernard J. Olup, James J. Pierre
Coal refuse slurry impoundments are dams constructed of coarse coal refuse to impound fine refuse (slurry) and water (25 to 30% solids). Both products are waste from coal preparation plants. A number
Jan 1, 1976
-
Mining - Roof of the Pittsburgh Coal Bed in Northern West Virginia (With Discussion)By Lee M. Morris
The Pittsburgh bed, lying at the base of the Monongahela series, is probably the most famous bituminous coal bed in the world; famous not only for the product yielded in mining, but also as a key hori
Jan 1, 1931
-
Design Of Cable Reinforcement Patterns To Resist Shear Failure In Open Stope WallsBy D. R. Miller
The use of fully grouted cables for ground reinforcement in underground mining is becoming widespread. Reinforcement design for this application has tended to be empirical although some two- dimension
Jan 1, 1984
-
Biographical Notices - D. K. TschernoffDimitri Konstantinovitch Tschernoff, was horn in Petrograd, Russia, on Nov. 1, 1839, and died in Yalta (Crimea) in the south of Russia, on Jan. 2, 1921. He obtained his early education in the Russi
Jan 1, 1922
-
Papers - Classification - Use Classification of Coal as Applied to the Gas Industry (With Discussion)By W. H. Fulweiler
The writer would define the term "Use Classification" as a discussion of the qualities that coal should possess to fulfill the requirements of the industry or process in which it is to be used. The ge
Jan 1, 1930
-
Biographical Notices - D. K. TschernoffDimitri Konstantinovitch Tschernoff, was horn in Petrograd, Russia, on Nov. 1, 1839, and died in Yalta (Crimea) in the south of Russia, on Jan. 2, 1921. He obtained his early education in the Russi
Jan 1, 1922
-
Atlantic City Paper - Notes and Observations on Cast-IronBy J. E. Johnson
The brief contribution of Mr. West* furnishes a text for the present paper, which will, however, take a wider range, warranted by the writer's somewhat unusual opportunities for the study of the
Jan 1, 1905
-
Industrial Minerals - Thorium and Uranium Resources in Monazite Placers of the Western Piedmont, North and South CarolinaBy J. W. Whitlow, P. K. Theobald, W. C. Overstreet
Monazite placers in a region of the Carolinas ex- in 1951-1954 by the USGS are estimated to contain at least 53,000 short tons of thorium and 4600 short tons of uranium. None of these deposits is
Jan 1, 1960
-
Kriging As A Tool To Avoid Overestimation Of Grade In Sulphide OrebodiesBy M. Vallée
This case study compares the actual production figures for the No. I and No. 2 copper orebodies of the Société Miniére Louvem, Val d'Or, Quebec, with the preproduction estimates and a postmortem
Jan 1, 1977
-
Problems Connected With The Recovery Of Petroleum From Unconsolidated Sands (6e1db464-ac7e-4bab-bef1-49ebd2b3e262)By H. Kobbè William
ARTHUR KNAPP, Ardmore, Pa. (communication to the Secretary*).¬On p. 2275 I find a quotation from Mr. Thompson regarding the fountains of the Baku field. I have seen a large number of these gushers or
Jan 3, 1917
-
Effect Of Grinding Media On The Surface Reactions And Flotation Of Heavy Metal SulphidesBy S. R. Rao, J. Leja, K. S. Moon
A prolonged grinding of sulphide ores in steel mills appears harmful to flotation recovery and selectivity whenever xanthates are used as collectors. Particles finer than about 10µm show a pronounced
Jan 1, 1976
-
Valuation of Coal Properties (309dad7b-9b50-46d4-a58c-a0d8a71a077d)By John Dilworth
IN considering the valuation of industrial properties in general, and of developed coal properties in par-ticular, it is assumed as fundamental that they have but one true value regardless of the obje
Jan 9, 1927
-
Papers - Copper and Brass - Internal Friction of an Alpha-brass Crystal. (Metals Technology, Sept. 1942)By Clarence Zener
The internal friction of nonferrous metals vibrating at low stress amplitudes has so far always been successfully interpreted in terms of inhomogeneities of one sort or another. Examples are the fluct
Jan 1, 1943
-
Papers - Copper and Brass - Internal Friction of an Alpha-brass Crystal. (Metals Technology, Sept. 1942)By Clarence Zener
The internal friction of nonferrous metals vibrating at low stress amplitudes has so far always been successfully interpreted in terms of inhomogeneities of one sort or another. Examples are the fluct
Jan 1, 1943
-
Nature Of CoalBy J. E. Hackford
IN SOME research. work carried out by the writer, certain results have bean obtained which bear on the fundamental nature and origin of coal and the relationship between coal and petroleum. Without en
Jan 8, 1920
-
AcknowledgmentsThe editorial expenses for the preparation of the manuscript of the second edition, as for the first, were provided by grants of the Engineering Foundation and the Open Hearth Steel Committee of the I
Jan 1, 1964
-
The "Plasticity" of Iron at Low TemperaturesBy K. Heindlhofer
ESTIMATES of the "plasticity" of a metal are commonly deduced from three types of test-tensile, torsion and impact. The several results have been more or less at variance, though this disparity has at
Jan 1, 1934
-
Solid State Bonding In Iron Ore PelletsBy Strathmore R. B. Cooke, Robert E. Brandt
EARLIER work1,2 has shown that the strength developed by fired magnetite pellets containing silica or silicates is due to three separate effects. Two of these are associated with the formation of slag
Jan 4, 1954
-
StyleTechnology has no recognized rank in what is called polite literature; the subject-matter of engineering is not supposed to lend itself to artistic treatment; we are the hewers of wood and drawers of
Jan 1, 1931