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Institute Representatives on Boards (6a041519-fc82-4c1d-8e16-ec44910fe97d)United Engineering Trustees, Inc. ARTHUR S. DWIGHT GEORGE D BARRON J V. N DORR Engineering Societies Library Board ROBERT PEELE PHILIP W. HENRY GEORGE C STONE JOSEPH E. POGUE The Engineering Foun
Jan 1, 1923
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Philadelphia Paper - Brazos Coal Field, TexasBy Charles A. Ashburner
VERY little is known of the economical value of the cod-bells of the State of Texas. The first authentic statement in regard to their occurrence is that contained in the reports of the United States E
Jan 1, 1881
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Papers - - Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in New York StateBy D. H. Newland
On the bulk basis New York's contribution to the production of oil is small, representing, as it does, a bare half of one per cent of the annual total for the United States. Yet it has more impor
Jan 1, 1934
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Testing of Roof-Bolting Systems Installed In Concrete BeamsBy Rudolph G. Wuerker
MUCH descriptive matter[ ] has appeared on the subject of suspension roof supports, or roof bolting, as it is more commonly called. The wide- spread introduction of roof bolting into coal mines and me
Jan 6, 1953
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Mining Engineering EducationBy William Plank
IN PAST YEARS, engineering educators and others have been able to study the problems relating to en-gineering education in the United States with only inadequate and, frequently, inaccurate data at th
Jan 1, 1928
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Washington Paper - The Inadequate Union of Engineering Science and ArtBy A. L. Holley
The application of scientific methods to the investigation of natural laws and to the conduct of the useful arts which are founded upon them, is year by year mitigating the asperity and enlarging the
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Carbonization - The Production and Use of Low-temperature Char as a Substitute for Low-volatile Coal in the Production of High-temperature Coke (T. P. 1745, with discussion)By G. V. Woody, J. D. Price
Many producers of by-product coke have spent considerable time and given considerable thought to the use of a substitute for low-volatile coal as an admixture with high-volatile coking coal for chargi
Jan 1, 1944
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Carbonization - The Production and Use of Low-temperature Char as a Substitute for Low-volatile Coal in the Production of High-temperature Coke (T. P. 1745, with discussion)By J. D. Price, G. V. Woody
Many producers of by-product coke have spent considerable time and given considerable thought to the use of a substitute for low-volatile coal as an admixture with high-volatile coking coal for chargi
Jan 1, 1944
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Papers - Flotation - Experience with Flotation Machines at the Sullivan Concentrator (T. P. 1693, Min. Tech., March 1944)By H. R. Banks
The Sullivan concentrator has completed 20 years of operation. During this period a considerable amount of data has been accumulated concerning the characteristics of several types of flotation machin
Jan 1, 1947
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Papers - Flotation - Experience with Flotation Machines at the Sullivan Concentrator (T. P. 1693, Min. Tech., March 1944)By H. R. Banks
The Sullivan concentrator has completed 20 years of operation. During this period a considerable amount of data has been accumulated concerning the characteristics of several types of flotation machin
Jan 1, 1947
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Fundamental Approaches To Longwall Dust ControlBy S. K. Ruggieri, R. A. Jankowski
Airborne respirable dust levels on longwalls can be reduced if operators approach the dust control problem in a logical and fundamental manner. This can be accomplished through the proper application
Jan 1, 1985
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Gas Absorption And Oxidation Of Non-Ferrous MetalsBy B. Woyski
MANY writers, in discussing defects caused by oxidation and gassing of bronzes and red brasses advocate substantially the same cure for both. But from its nature, oxidation cannot take place if there
Jan 5, 1922
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The Briquetting Of Anthracite Coal (9becf315-bc04-4a41-b1f4-62f53e4d2fc8)J. B. MCGRAW, New York, N. Y. (written discussion*).-In Mr. Burke Baker's description of the process of the American Briquet Co., he speaks only of the attractive features, but every process whic
Jan 5, 1918
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The Place Of Geophysics In A Department Of Geology (b672393b-3bcf-4292-821b-b17be179560f)By M. King Hubbert
THE growth of human knowledge is an evolutionary process. Historically our separate sciences came into existence as people became interested in various apparently unrelated domains of phenomena, and i
Jan 1, 1938
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Rolling Copper And Copper Alloys - IntroductionBy William Marsh Baldwin
THE ROLLING OPERATION proper is applied to metals and alloys not only in the production of flat products but also in the production of shapes, rods, wire and even in specialized forms in the producti
Jan 1, 1948
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Engineers? Reserve Corps.The Army Reorganization Act, which became effective July 1, 1916, contains a provision authorizing the organization of an Officers' Reserve, in which will be included a Corps of Reserve Engineers
Jan 8, 1916
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Joint Activities (147448a6-5807-4aad-9c16-f6d4c94fa1fc)The Institute conducts jointly with the American Society of Civil Engineers, American Society of Mechanical Engineers and American Institute of Electrical Engineers, certain activities as listed below
Jan 1, 1952
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Water Influx Into A Reservoir And Its Application To The Equation Of Volumetric BalanceBy William Hurst
THE content of this paper is a presentation of the diffusivity theory for the calculation of the water drive on an oil reservoir in which b the history of reservoir pressure with time are the essentia
Jan 1, 1942
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The Bowers-Campbell Mine – Tri-State’s Boot-Shaped Zinc DepositBy Larry G. Hayes
Development of the Bowers-Campbell zinc deposit, located in the Shenandoah Valley two miles northwest of Timberville, Va., was commenced in 1956 by the Tri-State Zinc Co. The occurrence of lead-zinc m
Jan 9, 1960
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New Haven Paper - Geology of Southwestern TexasBy E. T. Dumble
Introduction..........914 I. Topography,........915 The Nueces Basin........915 The Coastal Slope...........918 Streams..........919 II. Geology..........921 Eocene..........923 Basal Beds .....
Jan 1, 1903