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Electricity in Oil Fields - Relative Advantages and Costs of Electric Power in Lease Operations (with Discussion)By L. J. Murphy
The production of crude oil in the United States is exceeding consumption by one-quarter million barrels per day and, with the possibilities of West Texas, this condition of overproduction, unless con
Jan 1, 1928
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New York Paper February, 1918 - The Chilean Nitrate Industry (with Discussion)By Hugh R. Van Wagenen, Allen H. Rogers
There are few natural monopolies comparable with the nitrate industry. Perhaps the only other one is, curiously enough, also an essentia1 fertilizer material, viz., potash, of which the Germans have h
Jan 1, 1918
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Drilling- Equipment, Methods and Materials - Experimentally Determined Resistivity Profiles In Invaded water and Oil Sands for Linear FlowsBy A. Heim, M. Gondouin
Invasion experiments were run on Berea sandstone cores to get laboratory measurements of resistivity and saturation profiles characteristic of water and oil sands invaded by mud filtrate. Injection ra
Jan 1, 1965
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Geology of Elk City Mining District, IdahoBy P Shenon
THE Elk City district is in north-central Idaho about 60 miles east of Grangeville and near the headwaters of the South Fork of the Clearwater River (Fig. 1). At the height of its boom in the early si
Jan 1, 1934
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New York Paper - The Work of Crushing (with Discussion)By Arthur F. Taggart
A general awakening of interest among mill men concerning the mechanical efficiencies of their crushing machines is evident from a perusal of the recent files of mining publications. Considering the l
Jan 1, 1915
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Capillary Phenomena as Related to Oil Production (With Discussion)By Frederick G. Tickell
Petroleum engineers are displaying considerable interest in those fundamental properties of matter and energy that control the phenomena of oil and gas production. The subject is a difficult one to in
Jan 1, 1929
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Technological Advances In Polymeric And Composite MaterialsBy A. M. Lovelace
Introduction One area of engineering utilization of materials in which the requirements are especially rigorous and demanding is that of aerospace systems, including aircraft, helicopters, missiles
Jan 1, 1971
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Thermal Conductivity of Copper Alloys.-I. Copper-zinc AlloysBy Cyril Smith
ALTHOUGH not of the same importance as electrical conductivity, the capacity for conducting heat is nevertheless a very important property of metals and alloys. A knowledge of thermal conductivity is
Jan 1, 1930
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Blast-furnace Practice in FranceBy F. Clerf
BLAST-FURNACE practice in France is determined more or less by the character of the ores used. Some French ores are siliceous and others are calcareous, therefore by proper burdening a self-fluxing mi
Jan 1, 1937
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Conquest Of The Northwest FrontierBy A. Blake Caldwell
Northwest frontier is here defined as Alaska, the Yukon, the Northwest Territories and northern British Columbia. The mineral potential of this area is great and will unfold in the decade ahead but
Jan 1, 1971
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Institute of Metals Division - Tungsten Sheet Alloys with Improved Low-Temperature DuctilityBy J. L. Ratliff, R. I. Jaffee, H. R. Ogden, D. J. Maykuth
An experimental program was carried out to improve the low-temperature ductjlity of tungsten through the combined use of dispersed oxides for grain-size control and Groups VII and VIII metal additions
Jan 1, 1964
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Local Section News (8b8011a0-d2ff-4237-afaa-161cb15330f3)BOSTON SECTION ALFRED C. LANE, Chairman, GEORGE A. PACKARD, Vice-chairman, E. E. BUGBEE, Sec'y-Treas., Mass. Inst. of Technology, Cambridge, Mass. R. L. AGASSIZ, FRED W. DENTON. Forty-sixth
Jan 7, 1918
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Magnetic Anomaly Of Inclined Vein Of Infinite LengthBy L. Massé, Th. Koulomzine
NOTE ON HAALCK'S FORMULA QUANTITATIVE interpretation of magnetic anomalies is admittedly a difficult process. Few authors have attempted a general approach to this problem. A [ ] number of p
Jan 1, 1947
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Dewatering Florida Phosphate Waste ClaysBy Thomas P. Oxford, Leslie G. Bromwell
The waste clay slurry produced during beneficiation of Florida phosphate ore presents a major environmental problem. The large volume of waste requires impoundment in above-ground disposal areas surro
Jan 1, 1980
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Part V – May 1969 - Communications - A Proposed Method for Predicting the Low-Cycle Fatigue Behavior of 304 and 316 Stainless SteelBy J. T. Berling, J. B. Conway
MANY studies have been devoted to the correlation of low-cycle fatigue behavior. Several of these have also been concerned with the identification of an effective approach to the prediction of low-cyc
Jan 1, 1970
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Papers - Measurement of Pressures Developed during the Carbonization of Coal (T.P. 1118, with discussion)By Charles C. Russell
Pressures developed by the coal during the coking process have been responsible for serious trouble to many companies that operate or build by-product coke ovens. The insidious nature of this trouble
Jan 1, 1940
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Papers - Measurement of Pressures Developed during the Carbonization of Coal (T.P. 1118, with discussion)By Charles C. Russell
Pressures developed by the coal during the coking process have been responsible for serious trouble to many companies that operate or build by-product coke ovens. The insidious nature of this trouble
Jan 1, 1940
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Computer Control In Flotation PlantsBy H. W. Smith
This paper presents a review of developments to date in computer control practice, based in large part on Canadian experience. The basic problem examined is that of stabilizing control; matters consid
Jan 1, 1976
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Mica (4d0aeadd-50a2-42b7-8db5-6414561d6fbd)By George P. Chapman
Mica is a platy mineral occurring in a variety of complex hydrous aluminosilicate forms with differing chemical composition and physical properties. Principal minerals in the mica group include: Musc
Jan 1, 1983
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Merit Rating of Coal Mines Under Workmen's Compensation InsuranceBy E. C. Lee
THE safety of mine workers has received more attention from both State and Federal law-making bodies than any other industry, a fact that shows clearly the hazardous nature of the industry. The last,
Jan 10, 1917