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Metal Mining - Activity Increases at Iron Ore Properties - Improvements in Mechanization NotedBy Verne D. Johnston
ALTHOUGH the stocks of Lake Superior iron ore on dock or at furnaces at the beginning of the year were about 6,000,000 tons less than at the beginning of 1938, the steel industry was operating at only
Jan 1, 1940
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Photoelasticity And Its Application To Mine-Pillar And Tunnel Problems (6af597d6-12aa-44a0-83a3-760c8be8ec17)By David Sinclair, Philip B. Bucky
THE dimensions and shapes of mine structures may at present be determined by (1) field experience, (2) structural calculations, and (3) barodynamic tests.§ None of these, however, provide information
Jan 1, 1940
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Reservoir Engineering – General - Pressure Interference Correction to the Material Balance Equation for Water-Drive Reservoirs Using a Digital ComputerBy Michael P. Robinson
It has been suggested that streaming potentials are not nomlally logged because the streaming potentials known to be generated across mud filter cakes are substantially cancelled by streaming potentia
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Some Influences of Foreign Demand on the Domestic Oil SituationBy E. B. Swanson
FREQUENT reference has been made to the increased domestic gasoline demand recorded for 1931. This increase was in the neighborhood of 7,000,000 bbl. Although smaller relatively than that to which the
Jan 1, 1932
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Industrial Minerals - Application of Electrostatics to Potash BeneficiationBy W. C. Knopf, I. M. LeBaron
In the Carlsbad area potash is dry-mined and wet-concentrated. Wet concentration involves recircu-lation of saturated brines, with resultant difficulties of brine disposal and inherent losses in recov
Jan 1, 1959
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Institute of Metals Division - Misfit Strain Energy in the Au-Cu SystemBy Ralph Hultgren
IN solid solutions atoms of differing sizes occupy the same crystalline lattice, requiring that some of them be compressed and others expanded. The energy involved has been called misfit strain energy
Jan 1, 1958
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Chemistry of CoalBy John W. Tieman
Coal is a term applied to vegetable matter which, through geological processes of heat and pressure, has had both its physical and chemical properties changed. Because its chemical composition is vari
Jan 1, 1973
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Economics - Some Influences of Foreign Demand on the Domestic Oil SituationBy E. B. Swanson
Frequent reference has been made to the increased domestic gasoline demand recorded for 1931. This increase was in the neighborhood of 7,000,000 bbl. Although smaller relatively than that to which the
Jan 1, 1932
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Italy's Drive for Mineral Self-SufficiencyBy Charles Will Wright
ITALY is by- far the poorest in mineral resources of the so-called great pou7ers of Europe. Before the World War this shortage was not so serious as the essential minerals that could not be mined dome
Jan 1, 1939
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Managing Editor Of Coal AgeR. Dawson Hall, who has long been a member of the editorial staff of Coal Age, has been appointed managing editor. Increase the Promise of the future. Buy W. S. S.
Jan 7, 1919
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Desliming Ore Pulps With Sodium Silicate As A DeflocculatorBy E. R. Shorey
FLOTATION-Mill operator's have recognized that slimes are detri-mental to the flotation concentration of zinc ores. The, presence of primary slime in many of the Wisconsin ores is largely respons
Jan 1, 1934
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Looking Into the Future of the Coal IndustryBy Walter Barnum
AS a member of the Institute and as the president of the National Coal Association, I come before you today in a dual role. As an Institute mem-ber I welcome the opportunity to make complimentary re
Jan 3, 1927
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Petroleum Industry and National Defense - A Highly Developed Productive Organization Available and Willing to Meet All DemandsBy George A. Hill
WE of the oil industry, devoted to freedom of initiative, free competitive enter- prise, and free American institutions, applaud, with one voice, affirmation by the President of the national will and
Jan 1, 1940
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Methods Of Evaluating Hot Malleability Of Nickel And High-Nickel Alloys - IntroductionBy L. O. Bieber, L. H. Martin
DIFFERENT MELTS OF THE same type of nickel and high-nickel alloys, while having almost identical mechanical properties at room temperature, may have widely varying hot malleability. Either the upper l
Jan 1, 1948
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Practical Economics of the Present DayBy W. R. Ingalls
WHEN I was a boy, political economy was taught in the old fashioned New England high school that I attended. I still possess my text-book, an abridgment of one of the old classics, and, I referred t
Jan 6, 1923
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Minerals Beneficiation - Concerning the Adsorption of Dodecylamine on Quartz - DiscussionBy F. W. Bloecher, A. M. Gaudin
H. H. Kellogg—There is one point that the author has failed to emphasize sufficiently in his paper. What is commonly called the equilibrium contact-angle (the author's "maximum contact-angle")
Jan 1, 1951
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Minerals Beneficiation - Concerning the Adsorption of Dodecylamine on Quartz - DiscussionBy F. W. Bloecher, A. M. Gaudin
H. H. Kellogg—There is one point that the author has failed to emphasize sufficiently in his paper. What is commonly called the equilibrium contact-angle (the author's "maximum contact-angle")
Jan 1, 1951
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Production in North Central Texas in 1944By V. C. Perini
The 1943 designation of districts for the Transactions† has caused some confusion because of the elimination of the West Central Texas district and the allocation of the counties of this district to t
Jan 1, 1945
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Institute of Metals Division - Decomposition of Beta TitaniumBy F. R. Brotzen, A. R. Troiano, E. L. Harmon
Precipitation processes leading to drastic property changes are a frequent occurrence in titanium alloys containing large amounts of the retained high temperature P phase. In order to establish the ki
Jan 1, 1956
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Institute of Metals Division - A Proposed Mechanism for the Strengthening of SAP-Type Alloys (TN)By G. S. Ansell
RCENTLY, in investigating the high-temperature creep properties of an aluminum, SAP-type alloy, MD 2100, fabricated by Professor F. V. Lenel of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Ansell and Weertman1 f
Jan 1, 1960