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Origin Of The Texas DomesBy E. T. Dumble
The domes of the Texas coastal plain are structural features, consisting of bosses or stocks of salt, gypsum or anhydrite, or of combinations of these, intruding into and occurring in connection with
Jan 10, 1918
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Evaporation Loss Of Petroleum Theories And Their ApplicationBy J. H. Wiggins
This paper first pictures the economic phase of evaporation losses and the actual evaporative conditions in handling and storing crude and gasoline in the United States; then follows a discussion of s
Jan 7, 1924
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Institute of Metals Division - Dislocation Sources at Inclusions in Zinc (TN)By Norman Brown, Victor V. Damiano
ThE present paper proposes a mechanism of dislocation multiplication at internal inclusions or cavities and presents experimental evidence of such sources in zinc. Using an etching technique recent
Jan 1, 1964
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Environmental Problems In Underground MinesBy John C. Holtz
Hostility is a characteristic of the environment in underground mines. Nature opposes man's efforts to remove mineral deposits, and this condition is recognized when mining is described as winnin
Jan 1, 1970
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Symposia - Symposium on Creep of Nonferrous Metals and Alloys - Creep Characteristics of a Phosphorized Copper - DiscussionBy H. l. Burghoff, A. I. Blank
J. J. Kanter.*—The authors of this paper have demonstrated that at 500°F their alloy will elongate, under appropriately adjusted stress, one or two per cent over a period of 6000 hr. Then they show th
Jan 1, 1945
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Washington Paper - A Peculiar Siliceous Efflorescence upon Pig-IronBy B. F. Fackenthal
At the session of the Bethlehem, Pa., meeting of the Institute, held in the Durham Cave, at Durham Furnace, on the afternoon of May 20, 1886, I exhibited some specimens of a fibrous white efflorescenc
Jan 1, 1901
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Utah and Montana Paper - The Occurrence and Treatment of the Argentiferous Manganese Ores of Tombstone District, ArizonaBy Charles W. Goodale
The attention of the Institute has been called by Prof. John A. Church* and Mr. W. Lawrence Austin? to the free-milling ores of the Tombstone mines and their treatment, but the silver-bearing man gan
Jan 1, 1889
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How Human Beings Respond to Changing Atmospheric ConditionsBy W. J. McConnell
OBSERVATIONS on man exposed to unusual temperatures and humidities, and studies conducted under accurately controlled environmental conditions, have supplied information regarding the physiological re
Jan 1, 1930
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Geology of the Oil Fields of North Central Texas ? DiscussionDiscussion of the paper of DORSEY HAGER, to be presented at the Colorado meeting, September, 1918, and printed in Bulletin No. 138, June, 191S, pp. 1109 to 1118. WALLACE E. PRATT, Wichita Falls, Tex.
Jan 8, 1918
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BerylliumBy C. B. Sawyer
ALTHOUGH the element beryllium was discovered as the oxide by L. N. Vauquelin in 1797, this metallic element was not produced until about 1828, and then only as an impure powder. Thereafter the greate
Jan 1, 1953
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Heats of Solution of the Group III Elements Aluminum, Gallium, and Indium in Liquid Tin at 750°K (TN)By M. J. Pool, C. E. Lundin
THE relative partial molar enthalpies of aluminum, gallium, and indium in liquid tin have been measured at 750°K by liquid-metal solution calorimetry. The measured heat effects and the calculated rela
Jan 1, 1964
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Efficient Ventilation Of Metal MinesBy D. Harrington
EFFICIENT ventilation of metal mines consists in having such complete control of air currents that. there is always supplied at places where men work sufficient moving air to allow working at maximum
Jan 2, 1922
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The Tessié Gas ProducerBy A. L. Holley
THOSE who are familiar with working gas furnaces will perhaps admit that the ordinary producer is the least satisfactory feature of the- whole system, chiefly by reason of its great waste of fuel, bot
Jan 1, 1880
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Analysis of RocksBy T. Prof. Egleston
How to interpret the composition of rocks has been a question which has caused a great deal of discussion and investigation among geologists and chemists. It is evident that that analysis will give th
Jan 1, 1875
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Philadelphia Paper - The Manufacture of Iron and Steel RailsBy John B. Pearse
IN order to get an idea as to the strength of steel rails, it will be well to review the tests to which iron rails have been subjected. In England, Mr. Ashcroft found that the best 80 pound rails bro
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Stabilization - Governmental Regulation of Oil ProductionBy Northcutt Ely
The subject of this paper implies three questions: whether regulation is necessary; if so, what sort of regulation is wise; and, finally, by what government the power to regulate is to be exercised.
Jan 1, 1937
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Pittsburg Paper - The Magnetic Separation of Non-Magnetic Material (see Discussion 1089)By H. A. J. Wilkens, H. B. C. Nitze
At the Atlanta meeting of the Institute in October,' 1895, some brief remarks were made by Mr. Wilkens on the above subject. It is the object of this paper to set forth the substance of these pre
Jan 1, 1897
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Papers - - Petroleum Economics - Collective Planning in the Petroleum IndustryBy Joseph E. Pogue
The petroleum industry has been involved in Lore collective planning than any other American industry, with the exception of the railroads and utilities, and therefore is of interest as a case study i
Jan 1, 1935
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Papers - Corrosion - Seasonal Variation in Rate of Impingement Corrosion (With Discussion)By Alan Morris
Impingement attack, as one of the types of corrosion suffered by condenser tubes, has been given a prominent place in corrosion literature of recent years. It has been reproduced and studied in carefu
Jan 1, 1932
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Reservoir Engineering – Laboratory Research - A Laboratory Investigation of the Effect of Rate on Recovery of Oil by Water FloodingBy T. G. Richardson, F. M. Perkins
In the recent paper of Richardson and Perkins entitled "A Laboratory Investigation of the Effect of Rate on Recovery of Oil by Water Flooding,"' the authors found very little appzrent effect on o
Jan 1, 1958