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St. Louis Paper - Oxide of Zinc (with Discussion)By G. C. Stone
The method of making oxide of zinc direct from the ore was invented and developed at the works of The New Jersey Zinc Co. at Newark in the middle of the last century. The process was invented by Burro
Jan 1, 1918
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Zinc - Relative Rates of Reactions Involved in Reduction of Zinc Ores (Metals Technology, Apr. 1941.) (With discussion)By E. C. Truesdale, W. K. Waring
The Research,Division of The New Jersey Zinc Company (of Pa.) has conducted, over a period of years, numerous tests of the reducibility of various zinc ores and the reactivity of various kids of coal,
Jan 1, 1944
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Stress-Corrosion Tests on Cast Aluminum Alloys ? with Discussion on Cast Aluminum AlloysBy Hiram Brown
The problem of stress corrosion has been discussed a great deal recently, but many factors have as yet not been clarified. There are many interpretations of the definition of the word, different corro
Jan 1, 1945
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Properties Of Steel As Influenced By ConstitutionTHE primary interest in the subject of this chapter lies in the fact that various heats of steel made to the same chemical specification do not always-have the same properties. The properties consider
Jan 1, 1951
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Papers - Non-Metalic Minerals - Economic Notes on the Nonmetallic Mineral Industries (With Discussion)By Paul M. Tyler, Oliver Bowles
The extensive employment of nonmetallic minerals antedates the use of metals, but only within the last two decades has the production of nonmetals begun actually to keep pace with the complicated acti
Jan 1, 1934
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Papers - - Production - Domestic - Petroleum and Natural Gas Development in Montana for 1935By Eugene S. Perry
The only outstanding development in Montana oil or gas fields during 1935 was the extension of the Cut Bank oil and gas field 7 miles southward. This field is now about 20 miles long and 3 to 8 miles
Jan 1, 1936
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Papers - - Petroleum Economics - Proven Oil ReservesBy V. R. Garfias, R. V. Whetzel
It has been repeatedly questioned whether estimates of oil reserves are of any practical value, as the greater number of such calculations previously made have subsequently been proved to be grossly i
Jan 1, 1936
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Papers - - Petroleum Economics - Proven Oil ReservesBy V. R. Garfias, R. V. Whetzel
It has been repeatedly questioned whether estimates of oil reserves are of any practical value, as the greater number of such calculations previously made have subsequently been proved to be grossly i
Jan 1, 1936
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Papers - - Production - Domestic - Petroleum and Natural Gas Development in Montana for 1935By Eugene S. Perry
The only outstanding development in Montana oil or gas fields during 1935 was the extension of the Cut Bank oil and gas field 7 miles southward. This field is now about 20 miles long and 3 to 8 miles
Jan 1, 1936
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Petroleum Engineering Education - Case Methods of Teaching Geology to EngineersBy C. W. Brown
In the author's experience and contact with engineering students the old form of recitations had grown into the lecture system in which the student was a passive receiver of digested material. La
Jan 1, 1929
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Iron and Steel Division - The Sampling and Analysis of Liquid Steel for Hydrogen - DiscussionBy D. J. Carney, J. Chipman, N. J. Grant
G. Derge—With the development of this last weapon, there is not much of a chance for hydrogen. It is certainly a very interesting paper, and it gives us more confidence in sampling liquid steel for hy
Jan 1, 1951
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Production Engineering - Relation between Gas Energy and Oil ProductionBy Byron B. Boatright
The energy which causes oil and gas to flow from a reservoir formation into a well depends upon a differential between the formation pressure and the pressure at the well face. This differential press
Jan 1, 1932
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Production Control of Zinc as Viewed from the Tri-State DistrictBy P. B. Butler
IN common with others, the zinc industry found itself after the war largely over-capitalized, a condi-tion which still exists notwithstanding that Tri-State production has doubled since prewar days. T
Jan 4, 1928
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Boston Paper General - Geophysics and the Mining EngineerBy Allen H. Rogers
It has always seemed to me that there is a certain similarity between the work of the mining engineer and that of the doctor of medicine — each has very often to be governed in his actions by conditio
Jan 1, 1929
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Clays (3.15.4B)By B. F. Buie
Included in the general category of clays is a large and varied assemblage of nonmetallic silicate minerals which characteristically occur as fine-grained particles having flaky, sheetlike, or rod-sha
Jan 1, 1976
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Iron and Steel Division - Electrochemistry of Slag-Metal SystemsBy R. Littlewood
The concepts of "redox potential" and "oxide-ion activity" are suggested as measures of the fundamental slag properties of interest to the extraction metallurgist. Thermodynamic data for single oxides
Jan 1, 1965
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Lake Superior Paper - Application of Ball-mills in Southeast MissouriBy Lewis A. Delano, Harold Rabling
It has been generally recognized that, owing to the extreme friability of galena, fine grinding has a tendency to cause excessive sliming of the mineral, so operators of lead mills have attempted to a
Jan 1, 1922
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Institute of Metals Division - The Thermoelectric Properties of Binary and Ternary Copper-Nickel AlloysBy Daniel D. Pollock
The il'lott and Jones theory of thermoelectricity predicts that the absolute thermoelectric power of alloys of transition and noble metals should be a maximum when the concentration of the noble
Jan 1, 1962
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Salt Lake Paper - Effects of the Bag House on the Metallurgy of LeadBy L. Douglass Anderson
For some years past the annual reviews of the metallurgy of lead have almost uniformly stated that there have been no great changes, such as there were being more particularly noticeable in the refine
Jan 1, 1915
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Minerals Beneficiation - Slurry Pumps for the Long PipelinesBy T. E. Schmieman, J. E. Miller, M. L. Rizzone
Both centrifugal and reciprocating-type pumps have been widely used in the transport of slurries. Although with some limitations, centrifugal pumps may be used, especially for short-haul systems, howe
Jan 1, 1971