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Council Of Economics - Mineral Economics In Australia-Part IIBy L. C. Noakes
In 1947, only a year after its own establishment, the Australian Bureau of Mineral Resources, Geology and Geophysics formed a Mineral Economics Section. Originally, this Section consisted of a mineral
Jan 1, 1970
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Palabora Mining Company - Phalaborwa, Transvaal - Republic Of South AfricaThe Palabora ore consists of two types, a carbonatite containing a low titanium magnetite, and a foskorite containing high titanium magnetite. The latter type also contains substantial quantities of p
Jan 1, 1978
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Mining Engineering Reporter (dbee190a-f5ca-4792-a916-52b15ff59852)There is plenty of sulphur available but not at the price currently being paid for brimstone. Immediate shortages may be felt before the market adjusts, making marginal sources and by-product sulphur
Jan 5, 1951
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Trucking Operations At New Cornelia MineBy Harry H. Angst
THE history and efficiency of 40-ton capacity dump trucks for surface waste removal at the New Cornelia opencut copper mine, at Ajo, Ariz., are summed up in this paper. Tabulations of truck performanc
Jan 1, 1941
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Quantitative Economic Analysis Applied To The Mineral Industries - 2.8.A. Introduction - Brian W. MackenzieBy Kung-Lee Wang, Brian W. Mackenzie, Warren E. Morrison, DeVerle P. Harris, George F. Sharrard
The term "mineral economics" is applied to a wide range of activities in the mineral industries. Earlier chapters have described the application of economic concepts to the mineral industries-supply,
Jan 1, 1976
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Florida Paper - The Northeastern Bituminous Coal-Measures of the Appalachian SystemBy George S. Ramsay
The Appalachian system contains the largest area of all known Carboniferous coal-fields. Beginning near the north line dividing Pennsylvania and New York, it extends southwest through West Virginia, s
Jan 1, 1896
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San Francisco Paper - A Rule for Governing Cupellation Losses (with Discussion)By W. J. Sharwood
Cupellation is well known to be one of the most effective methods of separating silver and gold from base metals and other impurities, as well as one of the most accurate means for their estimation. I
Jan 1, 1916
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Reports of Institute for Year 1918Rossiter Worthington Raymond, Ph.D., LL. D-1840 to 1918.-Dr. Rossiter W. Raymond, Past President, Honorary Member and Secretary Emeritus, died suddenly of heart failure at his home, 123 Henry'St.
Jan 1, 1923
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Manufacture of Silicon Carbide RetortsBy E. J. Bruderlin
A METALLURGICAL process to be economically successful must be carried on under proper conditions of control and equipment. The question of equipment is always of primary importance. In the dis-tillati
Jan 1, 1936
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Part X - The 1967 Howe Memorial Lecture – Iron and Steel Division - Nucleation and Growth of Martensite in Some Uranium-Chromium AlloysBy G. Kimmel, A. Bar-Or
The rate of nucleation and the rates of both lateral and longitudinal growth of martensite plates (needles) in b—a transformation were determined as a function of temperature, in various U-Cr alloys.
Jan 1, 1968
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Dry-Washing For Placer-Gold In Sonora, Mexico.By J. V. Richards
(Canal Zone Meeting, November, 1910,) THE Altar district, State of Sonora, Mexico, is for the most part a desert with but little rain-fall and few running streams. On account of this scarcity of wate
Apr 1, 1911
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Institute of Metals Division - Influence of Carbon on the Lattice Parameter of MolybdenumBy D. J. DeLazaro, W. Rostoker, R. E. Riley, M. Hansen
At very low concentrations, carbon dissolves interstitially in molybdenum resulting in a linear expansion of lattice parameter with increase of carbon in solid solution. Geometrical consideration of t
Jan 1, 1953
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Round Table: Carbon in Pig Iron - Carbon in Pig Iron (with Discussion)By Ralph H. Sweetser
Carbon in pig iron is not only essential but, ordinarily, it is the most abundant metalloid present; iron without carbon could not be pig iron. Carbon in pig iron has been accepted, but seldom specifi
Jan 1, 1927
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Testing Of The Prototype Hydrominer In A Surface Coal Seam (cd6f600e-9582-4b2e-9781-581b482046e0)By David A. Summers, Clark R. Barker, Marian Mazurkiewicz
In May 1975 the U.S. Bureau of Mines contracted with the University of Missouri-Rolla, Rock Mechanics and Explosives Research Center to develop a Hydrominer modification to a longwall shearer unit, wh
Jan 1, 1979
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Surface Chemistry of Clays and ShalesBy Allen Garrison
THE chemistry of clays and shales has been assuming increasing importance in the petroleum industry, and two factors have greatly influenced this trend. The first has been the growing evidence that th
Jan 1, 1939
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Pittsburg Paper - The Effect of Additions of Titaniferous to Phosphoric Iron-Ores in the Blast- FurnaceBy Auguste J. Rossi
As is well known, practically all the phosphorus of the ironores smelted in the blast-furnace passes into the pig-metal, increasing its fluidity, but diminishing its strength to such an extent that, i
Jan 1, 1897
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Transformation of Austenite - Anisothermal Formation of Rainite and Proeutectoid Constituents in Steels (Metals Tech., December 1947, T.P. 2290) (with discussionBy Leonard D. Jaffe
In recent years, the advantages of tempered martensite as a microstructure for steel parts have been well established. For parts that must not fracture brittlely when loaded at high rates, at low temp
Jan 1, 1949
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Transformation of Austenite - Anisothermal Formation of Rainite and Proeutectoid Constituents in Steels (Metals Tech., December 1947, T.P. 2290) (with discussionBy Leonard D. Jaffe
In recent years, the advantages of tempered martensite as a microstructure for steel parts have been well established. For parts that must not fracture brittlely when loaded at high rates, at low temp
Jan 1, 1949
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Nonferrous MetallurgyHistory of Reverberatory Smelting in Montana, 1879-1933. By FREDERICK LAIST (Trans, vol 106 31,800 words ) The development of the art of reverbera¬tory smelting from 1879, when smelting first started
Jan 1, 1935
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Dexidation Symposium - Deoxidation of Basic Open-hearth SteelBy T. S. Washburn
Deoxidation is one of the most complex metallurgical operations in the basic open-hearth process. The necessity for deoxidation arises from the fact that the refining operations that precede it requir
Jan 1, 1945