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Geography and the Mining IndustryBy LEWIS F. THOMAS
MINING geologists and mining engineer, rarely give due thought to the geography of mining deposits. They realize, it is true that what may be ore in one place would be only worthless rock in another b
Jan 1, 1941
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Schuylkill Valley Paper - The Hugh Kennedy Hot-Blast StoveBy W. C. Coffin
Fire-brick stoves have become a necessary part of the modern coke blast-furnace equipment, and are also superseding the cast-iron pipe stoves in anthracite- and charcoal-furnaces. The brick stoves
Jan 1, 1893
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Secondary Recovery and Pressure Maintenance - Miscibility Relationships in the Displacement of Oil By Light HydrocarbonsBy W. M. Rutherford
A knowledge of the limits of miscibility between reservoir oil and possible injection fluids is required for selection of the optimum miscible-injection fluid. Limits of miscibility can be estimated f
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A Graphic Statistical History of the Joplin or Tri-State Lead-Zinc DistrictBy John S. Brown
IN 1925 the writer undertook a detailed statistical study of all producing areas in the Joplin district as a basis for evaluating programs and measuring objectives. For this purpose, the published fig
Jan 9, 1951
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Experiences With Density Recording and Controlling Instrument for Heavy-media Separation UnitsBy James J. Bean
Although determining and controlling specific gravity of operating medium in a heavy-media plant manually presents no problem, there are advantages to automatic recording and control. The two install
Jan 1, 1950
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Institute of Metals Division - The Tensile Fracture of Ductile MetalsBy H. C. Rogers
A phenomenological study of the failure of polycry stalline ductile metals at room temperature was carried out using light and electron microscopy. Tensile fractures as well as sections of partially
Jan 1, 1961
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Lightweight Aggregates In The SouthwestBy Stuart H. Ingram
DEFINITION THE term lightweight aggregate implies material which may be substituted for the usual rock, sand and gravel commonly used as the major part of concrete, but distinguished by being much
Jan 1, 1947
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New York Paper - Analysis of Some Drill-steel TestsBy F. B. Foley
With the possible exception of high-speed tool steel, the service demanded of rock-drill steel is probably more precarious than that of any other tool steel. Unaided by the helpful influence of alloys
Jan 1, 1922
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Reservoir Engineering–General - Calculation of Differential Gas Liberation and ShrinkageBy C. F. Weinaug
In recent years, several methods have been proposed for correlation of physical properties and behavior of hydrocarbon systems. These correlations were found to be unsatis. factory for predicting diff
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Increased Care Bears Further Fruit in Another Favorable Safety RecordBy John T. Ryan
FOR the first ten months of 1942, on which data are available at the time this is written, the coal-mining industry achieved a most creditable safety record, and ha1 figures for the year may show a re
Jan 1, 1943
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World Production of Coal in 1920By AIME AIME
T HE year 1920 will be a memorable one in the history of the world's coal supply. The prices reached were the highest of modern times, and as usually happens at such a time, the quality of the ou
Jan 1, 1921
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Butte Paper - The Substitution of Air for Water in Diamond DrillingBy Ralph Wilcox
The diamond drilling of certain characters of unstable rock formation, as, for example, the copper-bearing schists of the Miami district in Arizona, is rendered most difficult by what is known as a ca
Jan 1, 1914
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A Laboratory Method of Determining The Thermodynamic Efficiency of High ExplosivesBy Joseph J. Yancik, Leonard L. Felts, George B. Clark
Little information has been published concerning the actual or useful amount of energy obtained from explosives when they are used for blasting. To provide more data on this subject, 8-in. neet cement
Mar 1, 1956
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Columbia Steel Corporation OperationsBy W. R. Phibbs
THE Columbia Steel Corporation, organized in 1922, and taken over by the United States Steel Corporation on Feb. l, 1930, is operating one blast furnace at Ironton, Utah, which was started on April 30
Jan 1, 1930
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Papers - Analysis of the Generation and Delivery of the Blast to the Metal in a Bessemer Converter (T.P. 1344, with discussion)By J. S. Fulton
Those who live in steel-mill towns are so accustomed to the sight of flames spouting from the mouth of a Bessemer vessel that they seldom pause to think of the amazing process behind it. Actually cold
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Analysis of the Generation and Delivery of the Blast to the Metal in a Bessemer Converter (T.P. 1344, with discussion)By J. S. Fulton
Those who live in steel-mill towns are so accustomed to the sight of flames spouting from the mouth of a Bessemer vessel that they seldom pause to think of the amazing process behind it. Actually cold
Jan 1, 1941
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Minerals Beneficiation - The Response of Parameter Variation in the Hydrocyclone ProcessingBy L. Weyher, H. L. Lovell
This discussion is restricted to a very specific application of the cyclone - its use as a hydro-cyclone in the cleaning of fine coal. It is hoped that the development of the present data will assist
Jan 1, 1967
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Part I – January 1969 - Papers - Mass Spectrometric Determination of Activities in Iron-Aluminum and Silver-Aluminum Liquid AlloysBy G. R. Belton, R. J. Fruehan
The Knudsen cell-mass spectrometer combimtion has been used to study the Fe-Al and Ag-Al liquid alloys. By application of the recently developed integration technique to the measured ion-current rat
Jan 1, 1970
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Papers - Philadelphia Meeting – October, 1929 - Stability of Aluminum and Magnesium Casting Alloys (With Discussion)By A. J. Lyon
The stability and permanence of any structural material used in aircraft are of paramount importance. The spontaneous hardening, or age-hardening, which takes place in some of the aluminum alloys unde
Jan 1, 1929