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Geological Engineering- A Bridge Between Geologist And MinerBy Daniel R. Stewart, Ralph R. Sacrison
The function of the geological engineer is to assist in mine planning and operations by collecting, interpreting, and applying geologic data to the solution of engineering problems. The geologist supp
Jan 1, 1984
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Wilkes-Barre Paper - The Mayari and Moa Iron-Ore Deposits in CubaBy C. Willard Hayes
The determination of the question whether the Mayari and Moa mining-claims of the Spanish-American Iron Co. have been rightly denounced under the third section of the law of bases rests on the finding
Jan 1, 1912
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High Intensity, High Gradient Magnetic SeparationBy J. Iannicelli
Availability of large-scale high field/high gradient magnetic separators during the past five years allows applications of magnetic separation to feebly paramagnetic materials which have been consider
Jan 1, 1979
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Salt Lake Paper - The Ajo Copper-Mining DistrictBy Ira B. Joralemon
The Ajo copper district is in the heart of the Arizona desert, near the western boundary of Pima county. Gila Bend, the nearest railroad point, is 43 miles north of the camp, and the little Mexican bo
Jan 1, 1915
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AIME SalutesJan 2, 1951
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Underground Coal Mining Faces Technologic Transition in Decade AheadBy Walter Mueller
Transition in the underground coal industry, begun with the passage of the Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act of 1969, should be completed midway in the 1972-80 period. Surprisingly, many of the
Jan 10, 1972
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Reservoir Engineering-Laboratory Research - Mechanism of Flow and Controlled Dissolution of Salt in Solution MiningBy F. W. Jessen, H. Kazemi
A washing technique has been developed to form a spherical cavity in massive salt. The technique is, basically, a process of controlling the fluid motion in the cavity, the concentration distribution
Jan 1, 1965
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Resistance Of Artificial Mine-Roof SupportBy William Griffith
THE purpose of this paper is to make public record of new information in regard to the sustaining power of artificial mine-roof supports (not timber props) the result of investigations recently made i
Jan 10, 1917
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Production Engineering - Determination of Fluid Level in Oil Wells by the Pressure-wave Echo Method (With Discussion)By C. P. Walker
Determining the distance to remote objects by observing the time required for sound to traverse the intervening space is an old practice. Attempts have been made to use this method for determining the
Jan 1, 1937
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Coal Exploration (a790a920-1531-40e9-b388-3b34c2eac6a5)By Dell H. Adams
COAL EXPLORATION Coal exploration may be defined as the acquisition of data necessary to define and acquire a block of coal which can be mined at a profit. Unlike ore minerals, coal resources are
Jan 1, 1981
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Gas-oil Ratios - Relation of Air-gas Lift to Gas-oil Ratios and Effect on Ultimate Production (with Discussion)By F. W. Lake
The ultimate production from a natural reservoir of petroleum is inversely proportional to the gas-oil ratios existing during the producing life of the reservoir whenever gas is the major expulsive fo
Jan 1, 1928
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Part VIII – August 1968 – Communications - Formation of Jacobsite and Pyroxmangite on a 3 pct Silicon-Iron Alloy Containing Small Amounts of ManganeseBy K. Koneko, T. Nokoyama, S. Shibato
SEYBOLT et al.' have detected various silica films formed on a 3 pct Si-Fe alloy after heating at low oxygen potentials with the electron diffraction method, and they have made some observations
Jan 1, 1969
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Reservoir Engineering–Laboratory Research - Mechanism of Alcohol Displacement of Oil from Porous MediaBy J. J. Taber, I. S. K. Kamath, R. L. Reed
Alcohol floods of consolidated sandstone cores have shown the process to be strongly dependent on the phase behavior of the particular alcobol-oil-water system used. This means that in many cases the
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Laboratory Beneficiation Of Fluorite Ore From The Minerva Oil Company, Eldorado, IllinoisBy R. G. O’Meara, M. M. Fine
ONE of the principal activities of the Bureau of Mines connected with the recent war was to help to increase the supply of strategic and critical minerals. Fluorite was one of the most critical of the
Jan 1, 1946
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St. Louis Paper - Funnel and Anticlinal-ring Structure Associated with Igneous Intrusions in the Mexican Oil Fields (with Discussion)By V. R. Garfias, H. J. Hawley
FoR a number of years the senior author has been interested in the various geologic and engineering problems involved in the development of the petroliferous districts of northeastern Mexico, having i
Jan 1, 1918
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Geochemical Changes During In Situ Uranium Leaching With AcidBy Daryl R. Tweeton, William H. Engelmann, Orin M. Peterson, Jon K. Ahlness, Gregory R. Anderson
The Bureau of Mines measured the geochemical changes as H2SO4 was used for in situ uranium leaching by Rocky Mountain Energy Company near Casper, Wyoming. Cores and ground water were analyzed before l
Jan 1, 1979
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Reverberatory Furnace Practice at NorandaBy J. N. Anderson
Developments in reverberatory furnace practice at Noranda over the period 1928 to 1953 are described. Features of interest are increasing furnace tonnage from 700 to 2000 tons per furnace day, the use
Jan 1, 1955
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Borax And Borates Part 1By Ward C. Smith
The industry of producing and processing boron compounds is called the borax industry because the chief product is borax, the decahydrate of disodium tetraborate. For the same reason, it is common to
Jan 1, 1960
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Reservoir Engineering-Laboratory Research - Design of Laboratory Models for Study of Miscible DisplacementBy R. J. Blackwell, A. L. Pozzi
Scaled laboratory-model studies provide a powerful method for evaluation of a proposed oil-recovery process. In recent years, models have been used extensively to evaluate processes in which solvents
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Papers - Finite Plastic Deformation Due to Crystallographic SlipBy R. N. Thurston, E. A. Nesbitt, G. Y. Chin
A general relalionship between the amount of glide shear (due to slip) and the macroscopic shape change has been developed. Since the deformation can be large, finite strain analysis is employed. In t
Jan 1, 1967