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Mining Tax Variations In North AmericaBy John E. Dowis
Ore distribution being what it is, many of today's mining companies are forced to develop foreign reserves to satisfy the demands of their customers. This necessity complicates the economic pictu
Jan 1, 1970
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Technical Notes - What Mathematics Courses Should a Mining Engineer Take?By G. H. Miller
With the recent advances which have been made in science and technology and the increased use of mathematics in this area, the question of the best mathematics courses for a mining engineer to take is
Jan 1, 1971
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Preparation Of The Palabora Open PitBy Paul A. Hodges
With plant start-up slated for early 1966, Palabora Mining Co. will take its place among the large copper mining properties of the World. Located near the town of Phalaborwa in the Lowveld area of Tra
Jan 3, 1966
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Capillarity-Permeability - Displacement Experiments in a Consolidated Porous SystemBy J. S. Levine
A series of four displacement experiments has been run in a large alundum core. Flow potential distribution in each liquid phase was measured continuously through oil-wet and water-wet capillary barri
Jan 1, 1955
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Re-Treating Middlings From Coal-Washing Tables By Hindered-Settling ClassificationBy B. M. Bird
ONE of the problems studied by the U. S. Bureau of Mines in cooperation with the University of Washington has been the re-treatment of table middlings. Hydraulic classification has given the best resu
Jan 1, 1928
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Producing–Equipment, Methods and Materials - The Calculation of Pressure Gradients in High-Rate Flowing WellsBy P. B. Baxendell, R. Thomas
Work on the calculation of vertical two-phase flow gradients by Cia. Shell de Venezuela has been based mainly on the "energy-loss" method proposed by Poett-mann and Carpenter in 1952. The "energy-l
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Technical Notes - Torsion Texture of 70-30 Brass and Armco IronBy W. A. Backofen, B. B. Hundy
THE pole figure interpretation in a recent paper' on the torsion texture of copper was questioned in discussion,2 nd a simpler alternative interpretation was proposed. In the hope of reaching a p
Jan 1, 1954
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Vanadium - Treatment of Idaho-Wyoming Vanadiferous Shales (Metals Tech., June 1947, TP 2178)By M. T. Martinson, I. W. Nicholson, C. J. Chindgren, F. P. Williams, L. C. Bauerle, S. F. Ravitz
The vanadiferous shales of southeastern Idaho and southwestern Wyoming constitute the largest known reserve of vanadium in the United States.' These deposits have never been exploited except for
Jan 1, 1949
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Part IV – April 1968 - Papers - The Diffusion of Hydrogen in TitaniumBy M. T. Hepworth, T. P. Papazoglou
Hydrogen diffusion in hcp and bcc titanium in the temperature range 610° to 900°C was measured by reacting cylindrical specimens of high-purity titanium at constant temperature with small constant pre
Jan 1, 1969
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New Advances in Brown Coal Handling with a New Generation of Bucket Wheel Excavators, Stackers, and Shiftable Belt ConveyorsBy Erwin H. E. Gaertner
The brown-coal opencast mines in Germany's Rhineland have to cope with several problems. Predominant are densely populated areas with highly productive farmland, many railroads, highways, and riv
Jan 1, 1976
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Blast-Furnace RefractoriesBy Raymond Howe
SOME time ago,, a prominent engineer asked a representative of the firebrick industry to prepare a comprehensive paper on blast-furnace refractories. It was to have been the purpose of this paper to g
Jan 9, 1919
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Graphite (e428e43a-49d4-4da5-ab4f-f38cd43162ad)By G. Richards Gwinn
THE mineral graphite has been known for hundreds of years and was first used commercially as a coloring agent. Its true identity, however, was not recognized until the end of the eighteenth century an
Jan 1, 1949
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Fertilizer MineralsBy John P. Bryant, Samuel Kincheloe
Plant nutrients are obtained by plants from both the air and the soil. Carbon dioxide, a gaseous form of carbon and oxygen, supplies the carbon which usually makes up 50% or more of plant structure. P
Jan 1, 1983
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Geology - Geology in Development and Mining, Southeast Missouri Lead BeltBy John A. Emery, Frank G. Snyder
MINING geology has a threefold objective: to guide prospecting for new ore, to evaluate known orebodies as development risks, and to supply the detailed knowledge of ore structures necessary for more
Jan 1, 1957
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Institute of Metals Division - Silica Films by Chemical TransportBy T. L. Chu, G. A. Gruber
Silica films hare been rleposited 011 silicon substmtes at 400° to 600°C by a chemical-transport technique using hydrogen fluoride as the transport agent ill a closed system. This transport takes plac
Jan 1, 1965
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The Milling Practice Of The St. Joseph Lead Co.By L. A. Delano
DURING 1916, the St. Joseph Lead Co. milled 2,505,670 tons of ore. This is a daily operating average of 7855 tons. The economic concentration of such a large tonnage necessarily requires a plant equip
Jan 9, 1917
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Institute of Metals Division - Equilibrium Relations in Magnesium-Aluminum-Manganese AlloysBy Benny J. Nelson
AS a part of the fundamental research program of Aluminum Research Laboratories, some data were obtained on the ternary system Mg-Al-Mn. As very little information on the magnesium corner of this diag
Jan 1, 1952
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Minerals Beneficiation - Multistage Cyclones for Heavy Liquid Concentration of MineralsBy R. B. Tippin, J. S. Browning
The feasibility of multistage heavy liquid cyclone beneficiation of spodumene was successfully demonstrated in this investigation. The indicated recovery for the multistage circuits was mathematically
Jan 1, 1968
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The Extrusion ProcessBy W. W. Cotter, W. R. Clark
WEBSTER tells us the word "extrude" means to "force, press or push out; to protrude." As applied to the metal industry, the process consists largely of forcing plastic elements (plasticity usually obt
Jan 1, 1945
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Manganese Resources in Relation to Domestic ConsumptionBy John Reynders
Our entry into the World War suddenly brought home to us in a startling way the vital importance of manganese. Since the war, much has been written and said upon the subject of manganese and a great d
Jan 5, 1927