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RI 4823 Preparation Characteristics Of Coal Occurring In Westmoreland County, Pa.By William L. Crentz
In the past, Westmoreland County together with Fayette County produced about one-third of the bituminous coal mined in Pennsylvania. The Pittsburgh bed in Westmoreland County has furnished enormous qu
Jan 1, 1951
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RI 4824 The Flammability Characteristics Of The CnH2n-6 Aromatic SeriesBy M. G. Zabetakis
Benzene and toluene are the first two members of an important homologous series whose general formula is CnH2n-6. The members of this series differ in composition from benzene by some integral multipl
Jan 1, 1951
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RI 4825 Properties Of Colorado Oil ShaleBy K. E. Stanfield
This report presents the results of analytical studies made on two series of oil-shale samples from the Mahogany ledge of the Green River mine the character of the various grades of oil shale that are
Jan 1, 1951
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RI 4826 Zirconium-Titanium System: Constitution Diagram And PropertiesBy Earl T. Hayes
For several years the Northwest Electrodevelopment Laboratory of the Bureau of Mines, in cooperation with the Air Materiel Command, U. S. Air Force, has been studying zirconium alloys. A preliminary s
Jan 1, 1951
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RI 4827 Investigation Of High-Alumina Clays And Bauxite Of Northeastern MississippiBy Donald F. Reed
In the Coastal Plain sedimentaries of northeastern Mississippi, high-alumina clays and kaolins, which are bauxitized locally to varying degrees, are found in many places along the contact between the
Jan 1, 1952
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RI 4828 Investigation Of Kasna Creek Copper Prospect, Lake Kontrashibuna, Lake Clark Region, AlaskaBy R. S. Warfield
The Kasna Creek copper deposit near Lake Kontrashibuna in the Lake Clark region, Alaska, was the object of an investigative project by the Bureau of Mines during the fall of 1948. Recessed because of
Jan 1, 1951
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RI 4829 Nodulization And Pelletization Of Fluorite Flotation ConcentratesBy H. Kenworthy
Small batches of fluorspar flotation concentrates were made into nodules and pellets on a laboratory scale. Several of these were rated acceptable by laboratory evaluation methods. The most satisfac
Jan 1, 1951
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RI 4830 National Annual Diesel-Fuel Survey, 1951By O. C. Blade
The use of Diesel fuel as a source of power is continuing to increase in the United States. The latest available figures indicate that refineries are delivering in excess of 10,000,000 barrels of this
Jan 1, 1951
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RI 4831 A Survey Of Oil Production In Oklahoma By Water Flooding Part I. Nowata, Rogers, And Craig CountiesBy John P. Powell
The increasing demands for petroleum and its products and the steadily increasing cost of discovering and developing new oil fields are factors that emphasize the importance of increasing the recovery
Jan 1, 1952
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RI 4832 A Survey Of Oil Production In Oklahoma By Water Flooding Part II. Counties Other Than Nowata, Rogers, And CraigBy John P. Powell
The increasing demands for petroleum and its products and the steadily increasing cost of discovering and developing new oil fields are factors that emphasize the importance of increasing the recovery
Jan 1, 1951
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RI 4833 Static Electricity In Hospital Operating Suites: Direct And Related Hazards And Pertinent RemediesBy P. G. Guest
Many of the gases and vapors used in anesthesia form explosive mixtures with oxygen or air. Sources of ignition for these mixtures always have existed, in operating and anesthetizing areas. When ether
Jan 1, 1952
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RI 4834 Preparation Characteristics Of Coal From Somerset County, Pa.By Wiliam L. Crentz
The importance of Somerset County, Pa., as a coal producer is due in large measure to the presence reserves of low-volatile bituminous coals. Although many coal beds of minable thickness are present,
Jan 1, 1951
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RI 4835 Explosive Characteristics Of Titanium, Zirconium, Thorium, Uranium And Their HydridesBy Irving Hartman
The results of the first experimental study by the Bureau of Mines on the explosive properties of metal powders were published in 1945. Since that time the explosibility of numerous other industrial d
Jan 1, 1951
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RI 4837 Removal Of Magnesium And Magnesium Chloride From Titanium Sponge By Vacuum DistillationBy M. A. Cook
Crude titanium metal, produced by the reduction of titanium tetrachloride with magnesium, is contaminated with some excess magnesium end adhering magnesium chloride when it is removed from the reactio
Jan 1, 1952
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RI 4838 Bituminous-Coal Deposits In The Vicinity Of Eska, Matanuska Valley Coal Field, AlaskaBy Theodore R. Jolley
The estimated recoverable reserves in the area in the vicinity of Eska 2 mine are, 699,300 tons in the Chapin and Emery bas of the Maitland group. Those recoverable reserves are in the area between th
Jan 1, 1952
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RI 4839 Flammability Of Mixtures Of Individual Paraffin-Hydrocarbon Gases With Air And Added Nitrogen At Subatmospheric PressuresBy G. S. Scott
Safety problems in the mining and allied industries have led the Bureau of Mines to investigate over a period of years; the flammability (explosibility) of many types of combustible atmospheres princi
Jan 1, 1952
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RI 4840 Estimate Of Known Recoverable Reserves Of Coking Coal In Jefferson County, Pa.By James J. Dowd
The investigation to evaluate the reserves of coking coal in the United States suitable for the manufacture of metallurgical coke is being made by the Bureau of Mines in three parts: (1) To estimate k
Jan 1, 1952
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RI 4841 Beneficiation Of High Iron Arkansas Bauxite OreBy W. A. Calhoun
A method for treating high-iron Arkansas bauxites for recovering both abrasive and metal-grade bauxite has been developed by the Bureau of Mines. Present practice usually produces a reject containing
Jan 1, 1952
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RI 4842 Effects Of Water Flooding On Reservoir Temperatures And Wax Precipitation In The Bradford, Pa., Oil FieldBy Jr. Sayre
Results of studies of reservoir and wax-precipitation temperatures relating to wax deposition in the reservoir of the Bradford oil field are presented in this report. During 1949 and 1950 Bureau of M
Jan 1, 1952
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RI 4843 Process For Recovering Gold And Silver From Activated Carbon By Leaching And ElectrolysisBy J. B. Zadra
The use of activated carbon for extracting gold and silver from pregnant cyanide solution and pulp has been investigated many times. The primary advantage of this use of activated carbon is that .the
Jan 1, 1952