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Murray Plant (798a3af5-e8ae-4bae-8384-b5acffc41bf4)"The Murray Plant of the American Smelting & Refining Company is situated seven miles south of Salt Lake City, and has a fine view of the Salt Lake Valley with its fertile farms and orchards.It is loc
Jan 1, 1925
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Copper and Copper-Rich Alloys - Stress-corrosion Cracking of 70-30 Brass by Amines (Metals Technology, Feb. 1944) ('With discussion)By H. Rosenthal, A. L. Jamieson
The action of mercury on stressed brass to produce cracks was known before Moore, Beckinsale and Mallinson1 showed that actual season cracking did not occur spontaneously but could be induced by ammon
Jan 1, 1944
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International Smelting Company Tooele Plant (40adf69d-e885-444d-8312-e0524f6dbb75)"The Tooele plant is situated at the mouth of Pine Canyon, five miles northeast of Tooele City. The site forms one terminus of the Tooele Valley railway, which runs southwest through Tooele City to Wa
Jan 1, 1925
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Technical Notes - Two Errors in Pressure Measurement Using Subsurface GaugesBy Murray F. Hawkins, W. J. Ainsworth
In all types of subsurface pressure gauges the extension which occurs in the pressure-sensitive element is a function of the difference between the external (well or calibration) pressure and the inte
Jan 1, 1956
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Requirements Of A Breathing-Apparatus For Use In Mines.By Walter E. Mingramm
THE construction of rescue-apparatus on the principle of furnishing the wearer with air from a tank containing it under high pressure was given up by inventors about 20 years ago. Such an apparatus mu
Jan 7, 1908
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Petroleum Production - A ReviewBy John M. Lovejoy
CURRENT production of petroleum on such a vast scale presents many interesting problems- the solutions of which are important not only to those directly interested in the business, but to the nation a
Jan 1, 1937
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Production - IntroductionBy James Terry Duce
The symposium on production for the year 1941 contains few papers on the foreign situation. Rigid censorship prevails in various countries, as the question of the volume of petroleum supplies has beco
Jan 1, 1942
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Geophysicists Debate in Their Own Peculiar LanguageBy AIME AIME
ARGUMENTS and discussions were not lacking either Wednesday or Thursday mornings, when the geophysicists got together. The first session, under the chairmanship of Paul Weaver, was devoted largely to
Jan 1, 1933
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Mining Geology - More Attention Given to This Fundamental of Ore Development Than Ever BeforeBy George M. Fowler
DURING 1937 the subject of mining geology was probably given more attention and more mining geologists were usefully employed than at any previous time. Of the many contributing factors the most impor
Jan 1, 1938
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Reservoir Engineering-Laboratory Research - Stability Considerations in Downward Miscible DisplacementsBy J. M. Dumore
If in a vertical, downward miscible displacement, the transition zone between the displacing and displaced fluids is neglected, a criterion for stable displacement can be obtained by considering a sma
Jan 1, 1965
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Coal - The Effects of Inerts Upon the Ignitibility of Pulverized Bituminous CoalBy R. W. Borio, T. S. Spicer
Inflammability and crossing point apparatus were used to study the influence of increasing amounts oi such inerts as ash, fly-ash, pyrite, limestone and Portland cement with several pulverized bitumin
Jan 1, 1963
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Recent Developments in the Tri-State Zinc DistrictBy Arthur Clark, Terrill
THE Tri-State field is now believed to be the largest zinc district in the world. It has a potential production sufficient to supply the entire zinc demands of the country. It is estimated that a trai
Jan 1, 1920
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Institute of Metals Division - The Effects of Stored Energy and Recrystallization on the Creep Rupture Properties of Internally Oxidized Copper-Alumina and Copper-Silica AlloysBy N. J. Grant, Masao Adachi
A number of Cu-SiO, and Cu-A1203 alloys of low oxide content, produced by internal oxidation of copper-silicon and copper-aluminum dilute solid solutions, were exposed at temperatures up to 1050°C for
Jan 1, 1961
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Institute of Metals Division - Kinetics of the Initial Stage of Decomposition of Low Ms Iron-Nickel-Carbon MartensitesBy C. Alstetter, V. Kerlins
By using alloys with subzero Ms temperatures, this investigation demonstrates that the amount of decomposition of martensite during the quench from austenite may be considerable and especially so in s
Jan 1, 1963
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A Petrographic Study of Lead and Copper Furnace SlagsBy Roy McLellan
THE slags derived from the smelting of lead and copper ores are composed essentially of silicates. The problems arising from the smelting of these ores consequently involve the study of silicate fusio
Jan 1, 1930
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Bridgeport Paper - Ore-Dressing and Concentration in SwedenBy P. G. Linder
The mechanical concentration of ores has not attained any considerable extent in Sweden, by reason of a scarcity of ores calling for this kind of treatment. Of rich iron-ores there is still an abundan
Jan 1, 1895
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Papers - Minerals in World Economics - Nationality of Commercial Control of World Minerals (Abstract)By W. P. Rawles
In the foreword by C. K. Leith, Chairman of The Mineral Inquiry, it is pointed out that the ordinary mineral production tables do not show the commercial control, and that some knowledge of the situat
Jan 1, 1934
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Temperature Problems In Foundry And Melting RoomBy John Goheen
CONSIDERABLE work has been done in developing a pyrometer to measure the temperature of molten brasses, bronzes, and aluminum in the crucible. On account of the high melting points and the amount of z
Jan 11, 1921
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F. W. Draper On Mining In 'The Urals And Western SiberiaThe Ural Mountains, which were formerly the dividing line between Asia and Siberia, area chain of low mountains, the highest peaks reaching only a little over 5000 ft. The country has been much eroded
Jan 6, 1919
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Atlanta, Ga Paper - Discussion of Mr. Ormsbee's paper on A Southern Coal-Washing Plant (see p. 113)William B. Phillips, Birmingham, Ala.: The analysis of Pratt coal made by myself, and given by Mr. Ormsbee in his paper (p. 113), is likely to mislead the reader as to the real nature of this coal. It
Jan 1, 1896