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Environment-Water - CHAPTER 22By Benjamin C. Greene, H. Beecher Charmbury
Water is a most remarkable substance, essential for life of all kinds. As well as needing water to survive, man has always used it for agriculture, transportation, recreation, and many other things. W
Jan 1, 1981
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Grain Growth In High-Purity Aluminum And In An Aluminum- Magnesium Alloy - IntroductionBy M. L. Holzworth, Joseph C. Kremer, Paul A. Beck, L. J. Demer
FOR alloys which are in practice heat treated to obtain increased strength, such as steels, duralumin, copper-beryllium, and others, the treatment usually involves heating to a relatively high tempera
Jan 1, 1947
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Institute of Metals Division - The Solubility of Cementite in AusteniteBy R. P. Smith
Iron-carbon alloys containing a single-phase austenite region and a two-phase azcstenite + cementite region at the desired temperature were prepared by partial carburization of iron or partial decarbu
Jan 1, 1960
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Photocell Control For Bessemer SteelmakingBy H. K. Work
THE Bessemer process is one of the most interesting methods of making steel. At one time it was by far the most important. In recent years, however, it has steadily lost ground to the open-hearth proc
Jan 1, 1941
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Petroleum Division Plans Two Fall MeetingsBy AIME AIME
THE Petroleum Division will hold two meetings this fall, one on the Coast at Los Angeles, Sept. 29, with the technical sessions in the assembly room of the California Oil and Gas Association and a ban
Jan 1, 1933
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Absorbability Of Gases In Casting Copper And Effect Of Adding CuprosiliconBy O. W. Ellis
THE question of the influence of gases upon the properties of copper has received the attention of a number of investigators, among whom Sieverts,1 Iwasé,2 Lobley and Jepson3 stand preeminent. SOLUBI
Jan 1, 1928
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PotashBy Samuel S. Adams
Potash, the generic term for a variety of potassium-bearing minerals, ores, and refined products (Table I), owes its importance as an industrial mineral to the potassium requirement of growing plants.
Jan 1, 1975
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Minerals Beneficiation - A New Process for the Treatment of Oxidized Copper Ore by LeachingBy R. S. Silo
A new process for leaching oxidized copper ore (CuO) is presented. Its principle advantage is that it requires low cost raw materials. For large operations the only materials used are sodium chloride
Jan 1, 1967
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Fluorspar And Cryolite (21a84ea9-d225-49fb-8578-f562b0457b96)By Robert B. Fulton, Gill Montgomery
Fluorspar is the commercial name for fluorite, a mineral that is calcium fluoride, CaF2. The name, derived from the Latin word fluere (to flow), refers to its low melting point and its early use in me
Jan 1, 1983
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Chicago Discussions - Discussion of paper o Mr. Emmous (See p . 53)John A. Church, New York City: It requires some courage to appear as a critic of a theory which is not only the fashion among American geologists but is usually presented by them in terms which imply
Jan 1, 1894
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Effects Of Alkalinity On The Flotation Of Lead MineralsBy Marston G. Fleming
CRITICAL pH has been defined by Wark1 as that pH value below which a mineral will float and above which it will not float in solutions containing a given concentration of collector but free from other
Jan 1, 1952
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Manganese Steel, With Especial Reference To The Relation Of Physical Properties To Microstructure And Critical Ranges (39adcc3e-681c-4dcd-b89b-9da5df94bb07)By W. S. Potter
THE proportions of manganese and carbon in manganese steel are familiar to all, because manganese-steel castings have been well known for a decade or more in this country. The same alloy has now becom
Jan 4, 1914
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Petroleum As Fuel Under Boilers And In Furnaces For Heating, Melting, And Heat Treatment Of MetalsBy W. N. Best
(San Francisco Meeting, September, 1915) INTRODUCTION CRUDE oil attracted attention because of its excellence as a fuel for open-hearth furnaces; for making crucible steel and brass; for melting c
Jan 8, 1915
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Conditioning Surfaces For Froth FlotationBy Oliver C. Ralston, James E. Norman
SEPARATION of minerals by froth flotation is rightly called an art. It can truthfully be said that no two ores separate in the same way. The difference in results obtained when natural and synthetic m
Jan 1, 1939
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The Evolution Of Drilling RigsBy R. B. Woodworth
INTRODUCTION IN the sinking of bore holes, there are but two fundamental operations -drilling and hoisting,-which determine in the main the character of drilling mechanism and structures. There are e
Jan 11, 1915
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Stability of Aluminum and Magilesium Casting AlloysBy 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, 1928
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Chertification in the Tri-State (Oklahoma-Kansas-Missouri) Mining DistrictBy George Fowler
THE history of the production of sulfur from salt domes in Louisiana and Texas originated with the operations of the Union Sulphur Co. at Sulphur, La., followed by the Freeport Sulphur Co. at Bryanmou
Jan 1, 1934
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Coal - Computer Method for Estimating Proper Machinery Mass for Stripping Overburden (MINING ENGINEERING, 1961, vol. 13, No. 5, p. 480)By H. Rumfelt
The author demonstrates an approach for analyzing overcasting requirements for a stripping project. This approach to the problem employs indicated trends in the relationship of the weight of the mach
Jan 1, 1961
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AIME Annual Meeting To Attract Registrants From All Sections Of Western HemisphereMORE than 2500 members of the AIME from all sections of the U. S., Canada, Central and South America are expected to attend the 175th General Meeting scheduled for Los Angeles Feb. 16 to 21, 1953. The
Jan 1, 1952
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Reservoir Engineering Equipment -An Electrical Computer for Solving Phase Equilibrium ProblemsBy Morris Muskat, J. M. McDowell
In both production and refining operations of the oil industry many processes are controlled by the gas-liquid phase relationships of the hydrocarbon mixtures of interest. The quantitative beh
Jan 1, 1949