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The Traffic Manager And His Role In Saving Shipping CostsBy A. M. Ribe
Briefly stated, the mission of the traffic manager (currently called a transportation services manager) is to enable his firm to utilize to its best economic advantage the various systems and modes of
Jan 1, 1970
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CMC of Flotation Reagents and Its Relation to HLBBy I. J. Lin
Surfactants are classified according to the size and strength of the hydrophilic and lipophilic groups of the molecule. The balance of these two opposing groups is known as the hydrophile-lipophile ba
Jan 1, 1972
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Characterization Of The Precambrian Granite In Northwestern IllinoisBy Mary Sue Coates
Characterization of the rock mass in which deep underground structures are to be located is of critical importance to the feasibility and design of the structures. The process involves areal studies,
Jan 1, 1984
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Kinetics of Exchange Reactions Between Liquid Bismuth-Rare Alloys and Fused SaltsBy H. M. Katz, J. L. Speirs, F. B. Hill
Jan 1, 1961
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Recovery Of Mercury From Amalgamation Tailing, Buffalo Mines, CobaltBy E. B. Thornhill
(San Francisco Meeting, September, 1915) IN this paper on the recovery of mercury as sulphide, from the residues from the amalgamation and cyanide treatment of high-grade ores and concentrates, I wil
Jan 8, 1915
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Philadelphia Paper - The Amount of Manganese required to Remove the Oxygen from Iron after it has been blown in a Bessemer ConverterBy S. A. Ford
I would like to call the attention of our Bessemer steel manufacturers to a few facts in regard to the action of the manganese in the spiegel with the oxide of iron in the blown iron. The oxygen is
Jan 1, 1881
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Resurrection Cuts Mining Costs - Makes Lower Grade Ore EconomicBy C. N. Stout
Square-sets go out and labor saving combination of top-slicing and sub-level caving raises tons per man hour 300 pct, cuts timber cost 50 pct to permit mining lower grade ores.
Jan 1, 1953
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Minerals Beneficiation - Ultrasonic Desliming and Upgrading of OresBy S. C. Sun, D. R. Mitchell
T LTRASONICS can be used to deslime and up-grade ores, such as tungsten and tin, which slime excessively with high losses of value in the tailing and are difficult to deslime with conventional methods
Jan 1, 1957
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Energy Input and Size Distribution in ComminutionBy R. Schuhmann
Distribution of material in the fine sizes of a comminution product generally is well represented by the empirical equation [ ] in which y = cumulative percent finer, x = parti
Jan 2, 1960
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Cleveland Paper - The Refining of Sulphides Obtained in the Lixiviation Process with Hyposulphite SolutionsBy C. A. Stetefeldt
Steam-dRied sulphides, obtained in the lixiviation-process, are now almost exclusively sold to smelters, the old methods of melting (after roasting) in crucibles, or cupelling with lead at the mill, h
Jan 1, 1892
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In-Transit Wind Erosion Losses of Coal and Method of ControlBy K. H. Nimerick, G. P. Laflin
Laboratory data and field tests indicate that substantial losses of valuable coal can be caused by wind erosion. Wind tunnel tests show the effects of wind velocity and particle sizing on the amount o
Jan 8, 1979
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DeceasedElected Died 1895 *ABBOTT, AI ATTHUR 1908 1882 *ABBOTT, ARTHUR V 1906 1905 * ABE, MASAYOSHI 1909 1903 * ADAMS, CHARLES C. 1905 1905 * ADAMS, WILLAMS 1909 1903 * ADAMS, W. EDWARDS 1910 1884 *A
Jan 1, 1917
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Transformation of Austenite - Hardenability Effects in Relation to the Percentage of Martensite (Metals Tech., April 1946, T. P. 1994, with discussion)By J. M. Hodge, M. A. Orehoski
The relationship between hardenability based on a 50 per cent martensite criterion, and that based on higher percentages of martensite in a number of low-alloy steels was discussed in a previous pa
Jan 1, 1947
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Transformation of Austenite - Hardenability Effects in Relation to the Percentage of Martensite (Metals Tech., April 1946, T. P. 1994, with discussion)By M. A. Orehoski, J. M. Hodge
The relationship between hardenability based on a 50 per cent martensite criterion, and that based on higher percentages of martensite in a number of low-alloy steels was discussed in a previous pa
Jan 1, 1947
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Coal Mine Roadway Stability in Relation to Lateral Tectonic Stress - Western CanadaBy M. L. Jeremic
Mining practice and underground studies show that, besides mining stresses, lateral tectonic stress also influences roadway stability. Roadways perpendicular to the direction of major lateral stres
Jan 1, 1982
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Modeling Fluid Flow In Selective Placement Of Toxic Mine Spoil (9414fd69-8291-4283-96b1-97ff6d626ffd)By L. W. Saperstein, J. C. Mills, L. B. Phelps
Selective placement of toxic mine spoil has been advocated as a means of reducing environ¬mental pollution at the source. However, methods of burial to control environmental damage are not well unders
Jan 1, 1986
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Michilla: A Chilean Desert Blossoms into A Habitable Industrial CompoundBy Rafael Errazuriz
About eighty miles north of the city of Antofagasta, Chile, located just below the Tropic of Capricorn, there spreads a wide desert area where copper oxide outcrops can be seen with the naked eye. Num
Jan 8, 1973
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Update: Underground Mining in the USUS underground mine production of nonfuel minerals was 153 million tons of crude ore in 1971, according to a recent US Bureau of Mines report compiled by Dravo Corp. Underground capacity includes all
Jan 7, 1975
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A Study Of Fracture Pressurization As A Result Of Explosive DetonationBy W. L. Fourney
This paper describes a number of model tests conducted in Plexiglas models to investigate the phenomenon of fracture pressurization. The models were examined with high speed photography while being su
Jan 1, 1984
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Why does the Coal Industry Need Stabilization?By George Rice
SINCE my earliest recollection, the coal business has been in a state of unrest. It has always been a matter of bewilderment to the serious thinking, the instability of this most important industry; s
Jan 5, 1922