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Safety Practice For Hoisting RopesBy R. M. Raymond
THE Mining Section of The National Safety Council recently sent out a questionnaire to operators, regarding the class of rope used, specifications required or obtained, factors of safety observed, met
Jan 2, 1922
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Technical Notes - Extent of Strain of Primary Glide Planes in Extended Single Crystalline Alpha BrassBy R. Maddin
IN analyzing the relation between the orientation of new grains and that of the deformed matrix of axially extended and recrystallized single crystals of face-centered cubic metals, a two-stage rotati
Jan 1, 1953
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Townships Named For Mining EngineersThe following communication has just reached the Institute, from the office of the Provincial Geologist, Department of Lands,-Forests and Mines, Ontario, Canada: During the autumn of 1917 gold was di
Jan 6, 1918
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Manufacture of Semisteel for ShellsBy Frank Hall
THE needs of the World War showed the necessity of a metal stronger than cast iron which would supplement the supply of steel. So patriotic metallurgists were spurred to new efforts to improve the sta
Jan 1, 1920
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Shenandoah-Dives Proves Profitable on $6 OreBy AIME AIME
CHARLES A. CHASE, manager of the Shenandoah-Dives Syndicate, operating the Shenandoah Mines in southwestern Colorado, reviewed the current work at that property at a recent meeting of the Colorado Sec
Jan 1, 1932
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A Uniform Expression for ResistivityBy Sherwin Kelly
THE need for geophysicists to adopt a uniform mode of expressing the electrical resistivity of geological formations has been stressed by Dr. A. S. Eve.1 The present paper is to emphasize the point he
Jan 1, 1932
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Wyoming And Montana - WyomingOn August 4, 1844, J. C. Fremont made the first record found of coal in Wyoming. On the North Fork of the Platte River, beyond Medicine Butte, in Carbon County, he noted: "in the precipitous bluffs we
Jan 1, 1942
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Geophysics and Geochemistry - Progress in Mapping Underground Solution Cavities with Seismic Shear WavesBy J. C. Cook
In solution-mining of underground salt and similar minerals, using drilled wells for access, it is desirable to monitor the lateral growth pattern of the resulting fluid-filled cavern. Therefore, a pr
Jan 1, 1964
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The Basic Open-hearth ChargeBy PAUL H. SHAEFF
THIS paper is presented with the idea of discussing only the basic open-hearth charge. The importance of the charging operation in producing steel is more clearly understood by dividing the principal
Jan 1, 1926
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Canvas Tubing For Mine VentilationBy L. D. Frink
THOSE actively interested in mining are fully aware of the ever-increasing difficulty of making conditions such that efficient work can be clone in underground openings, especially as higher rock temp
Jan 1, 1918
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Industrial Minerals Of 1969- Their Status, Challenge And FutureAs 1970 develops and industrial minerals stand at a crucial point in their progress, research and development programs appear to be the key needed to open up new uses for each mineral's future gr
Jan 1, 1970
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Graphite For Manufacture Of CruciblesBy G. Richards Gwinn
GRAPHITE is one of the so-called minor nonmetals that have become of major importance during the present conflict. Requirements of the domestic industry for graphite are relatively small and uses have
Jan 1, 1945
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Boston Paper - The New York Mining LawBy R. W. Raymond
The Mining Law of New Pork, contained in Title XI., Chapter IX., Part One of the Revised Statutes, is as follows: Section 1. The following mines are, and shall be, the property of the people of thi
Jan 1, 1888
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Papers - Non-Metalic Minerals - Development of the Grande Ecaille Sulfur DepositBy Wilson T. Lundy
The history of the production of sulfur from salt domes in Louisiana and Texas originated with the operations of the Union Sulphur CO. at Sulphur, La., followed by the Freeport Sulphur Co. at Bryanmou
Jan 1, 1934
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Borax Processing At Searles LakeBy Donald E. Garrett
The processing of brines from Searles Lake, California, yields one of the world's largest supplies of borax and boron chemicals, second probably only to the massive deposit at Boron, California.
Jan 1, 1960
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One Step in Production ControlBy George Smith
THE discussion of production control at the Insti-tute's annual meeting was profitable in that it started some thinking. One pertinent question there raised was how the opening of new mines, whos
Jan 5, 1928
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Geology - Structural and Stratigraphic Control of Ore Deposition in the West Shasta Copper-Zinc District, CaliforniaBy A. R. Kinkel
THE Shasta copper-zinc district of northern California lies in the foothills of the Klamath Mountains at the northern end of the Sacramento Valley. It contains two main areas of base-metal ore deposit
Jan 1, 1956
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Technical Papers and Notes - Extractive Metallurgy Division - A Kinetic Study of the Dissolution of UO2 in Sulfuric AcidBy M. E. Wadsworth, T. L. MacKay
Sintered UO, samples were leached in sulfuric acid solutions of various concentrations. A pressurized system was used so that it was possible to investigate the kinetics of the reaction to 270°C with
Jan 1, 1959
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A Proposed New Converter, And The Application Of The Bessemerizing Process To The Smelting Of OresBy Herbert Haas
1. INTRODUCTION COPPER matte is now converted into blister copper at a cost of only $5 per ton of copper, or, based on a 40 per cent. matte, $2 per ton of matte, which is the record of at least one l
Jan 6, 1914
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Philadelphia Paper - Steel for BridgesBy John W. Cloud
In 1877 the Pennsylvania Railroad Company removed an old bridge from its line at Duncannon, Pa., built intermediate piers and erected shorter spans of the Pratt truss type, which had previously been i
Jan 1, 1881