Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Dredge Pump Life Increased By Hard Alloy, Water Cushion, Double CasingBy George T. Bator
If confronted with the problem of pumping a mixture of slime-free sand, gravel and boulders up to six in. in diameter, at the rate of 175 tons per hr in one single-stage pump against a static head of
Jan 9, 1950
-
Blind Drilling a 3-m-Diam Shaft To the Deep Saline Oil Shale Zone in Northwest ColoradoBy Ray W. Amstutz
The shaft was drilled on US government land m the Piceance Creek basin and was funded by the US Bureau of Mines (USBM). It was drilled to 723 m to provide access to rich deposits of oil shale, nahcoli
Jan 1, 1982
-
Tectonic Position Of Ore Districts In The Rocky Mountain RegionBy Paul Billingsley
THE mining districts of the first and second order1 of the western United States (and borders) are those named on Fig. 1. These fall into four groups: (1) in the eastern outliers of the Rocky Mountain
Jan 1, 1933
-
New Records in Driving a Single-Heading TunnelBy S. O. ANDROS
RECORDS in mining operations naturally fall when improved equipment and methods are developed. And tunneling through the Continental Divide is a mining operation, even though the tunnel was not driven
Jan 1, 1934
-
Effects Of Tin On The Properties Of Plain Carbon SteelBy J. W. Halley
THE effects of tin on steel have become increasingly important because of the necessity of using poorly detinned scrap, tin cans, and terne plate, in the open hearth. Since a tin can contains about 1.
Jan 1, 1942
-
Minerals Beneficiation - A New Approach to Copper-Nickel Ore ProcessingBy K. D. Hester, A. W. Fletcher
A nickel-copper sulphide concentrate was treated in a pilot plant at Warren Spring Laboratory during 1961, by a hydrometallurgical roast-leach-solvent extraction process devised to cleanly separate th
Jan 1, 1964
-
Sublevel Caving Techniques Optimize Kiirunavaara ProductionBy R. Malmstrom, H. Heden, K. Likin
Sublevel caving techniques at Luossavaara-Kiirunavaara AB (LKAB) in Sweden have undergone significant modification over the years as management strives to maintain mine viability amidst rising costs a
Jan 10, 1979
-
Institute of Metals Division - The Effect of Oxygen, Nitrogen, and Hydrogen on Iodide Refined TitaniumBy I. E. Campbell, R. I. Jaffe
Oxygen, nitrogen, and hydrogen are known to be absorbed by titanium at elevated temperatures. Ehrlichl reports that about 30 at. pct oxygen can be dissolved in solid solution by alpha-titanium. Nitrog
Jan 1, 1950
-
Effects Of Tin On The Properties Of Plain Carbon SteelBy J. W. Halley
THE effects of tin on steel have become increasingly important because of the necessity of using poorly detinned scrap, tin cans, and terne plate, in the open hearth. Since a tin can contains about 1.
Jan 1, 1942
-
John Van Nostrand Dorr - James Douglas Medalist for 1930By James Douglas
PROBABLY no well-informed engineer would ques¬tion the accuracy of the statement that the piece of equipment that comes nearest to being in universal use in modern hydrometallurgical and ore-dressing
Jan 1, 1930
-
Reinforcement Of Large Pillars By BoltingBy S. J. Mitchell
An analysis of bolting reinforcement of several large [approximately 18 m (60 ft) cube] pillars was performed. The many overcoring stress profiles in pillars at the mine were used to produce generaliz
Jan 1, 1984
-
Fundamental Studies on the Role of Carbon Dioxide in a Calcite Flotation SystemBy N. Mohan, A. K. Biswas, V. Y. Sampat Kumar
At low sodium-oleate concentration, calcite flotation is substantially improved by the use of CO2 instead of air. Electrophoretic mobility measurements indicate that carbonation results in the accumul
Jan 1, 1972
-
Gases in Metals Takes Up One DayBy AIME AIME
THE joint symposium on gases in metals on Tuesday: Feb. 16, between the Iron and Steel and the Institute of Metals divisions opened the technical sessions for both of these bodies. After a few words o
Jan 1, 1932
-
New York Paper - The Discovery of New Gold-Districts (Discussion 1031)By H. M. Chance
The recent discoveries of important new gold-districts in limestone, granite, sandstone and porphyry have awakened the more intelligent class of prospectors to a realization of the fact that ally rock
Jan 1, 1900
-
Tellurium and Selenium, the Useless ElementsBy Galen Clevenger
TELLURIUM has had the rare and unpleasant distinction of having fewer uses than any of the other common elements; indeed, it has had no regular or important uses. It is not only a useless and disagree
Jan 1, 1923
-
James Boyd, 1975 Hoover Medal Recipient, Raises a Challenge to Today's EngineersBy Eugene Guccione
"All engineering societies should encourage and motivate their members to take part in public affairs. And engineers, in turn, should learn to translate their technical knowledge in a language which p
Jan 1, 1976
-
Effects Of Bleeder Entries During Atmospheric Pressure ChangesBy John W. Stevenson
In gassy coal mines, abandoned worked-out areas are natural reservoirs that may contain air- methane mixtures. The quantity of such mixtures is continuously increasing or decreasing as atmospheric pre
Jan 6, 1968
-
Production of Synthetic Gypsum and its Uses in JapanBy T. Kusakawa
In Japan, natural gypsum is rarely mined for industrial use and almost all gypsum is synthetic, that is desulphogypsum, produced from waste sulphur dioxide gas from metal smelters and power plants and
Jan 1, 1984
-
Loading and Haulage at the Indian Creek MineBy Laurence W. Casteel
Indian Creek Mine, newest of the St. Joseph Lead Co. properties, is located in southeast Missouri on the flanks of a buried porphyry ridge. Here the orebodies are very irregular in size and shape and
Dec 1, 1956
-
AIME Fall Meeting And Engineering Centennial Celebration Plans ProgressPlans for the fall meeting of the AIME, to be held in conjunction with the Centennial of Engineering -marking the 100th anniversary of the Society of Civil Engineers-indicate that the Chicago gatherin
Jan 1, 1952