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Mexican Oil FieldsBy Stirling Huntley, L. G. Huntley
THE controversy regarding the ,'probable future of the Mexican oil fields, and its relation to the oil industry of the United States, has led to the preparation of this paper. As has been predict
Jan 1, 1921
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Wilkes-Barre Paper - Mining-Costs at Park City, UtahBy Fred T. Williams
The Park City mining-district is distinctively a camp of few properties, 5,000 acres, or one-third of the entire district, being under the management of but three companies. As a rule, the ore-bodies
Jan 1, 1912
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Calculation Of Support For Hard, Jointed Rock Using The Keyblock PrincipleBy Gen-Hua Shi, William Boyle, Richard E. Goodman
This keynote paper calls attention to two critically important issues relating to selecting supports for excavations in hard rock. The first is the proportion of the ultimate sliding volume that needs
Jan 1, 1982
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Population Pressure – And UsBy E. A. Hartsook
Since World War II we have all been treated to repeated public and private evaluation of the population explosion. Improvements in medicine and agriculture have brought greater life expectancy and a d
Jan 6, 1965
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Salt Lake Paper - Dip Chart (with Discussion)By Howland Bancroft
The writer has observed that some confusion is experienced by many mining engineers in making vertical sections of ore deposits in mining properties which they have examined. Having much examination w
Jan 1, 1915
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Petroleum Economics - World Consumption of Petroleum and Its Substitutes in 1941By R. V. Whetsel, V. R. Gargias, J. W. Ristori
WoRld consumption of petroleum and its substitutes in 1941, the amount of which obviously is largely conjectural, is estimated at 2,066,653,000 bbl. This is 48,689,000 bbl. more than the previous year
Jan 1, 1942
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Petroleum Economics - World Consumption of Petroleum and Its Substitutes in 1941By V. R. Gargias, J. W. Ristori, R. V. Whetsel
WoRld consumption of petroleum and its substitutes in 1941, the amount of which obviously is largely conjectural, is estimated at 2,066,653,000 bbl. This is 48,689,000 bbl. more than the previous year
Jan 1, 1942
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Block-Caving At The Sunrise Iron Mine, WyomingBy George H. Rupp
THE Sunrise iron mine of The Colorado Fuel and Iron Corporation is in Platte County, Wyoming, about 110 miles north of Cheyenne. It is served by the company-owned Colorado and Wyoming Railway, which c
Jan 1, 1939
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Collapsible Steel Props in Longwall Anthracite MiningBy John Buch
NEARLY 25 years ago operating officials in the northern anthracite field were confronted with the problem of profitably mining virgin beds of thin coal (those 48 in. and under) or destroying them by m
Jan 1, 1939
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Economics - A Comparison of Old and New Oil FieldsBy L. C. Snider
During the past few years a number of large and highly productive oil fields have been discovered in the United States. The immediate oversupply which has resulted, together with the circumstances und
Jan 1, 1933
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Activation And Deactivation Of Sphalerite With Ag And Cn IonsBy A. M. Gaudin, D. W. Fuerstenau, M. M. Turkanis
SOLUBLE silver salts are effective activators for flotation of sphalerite with potassium ethyl xanthate as collector.' Since sphalerite takes up large quantities of silver ions rapidly," investig
Jan 1, 1957
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History And Bibliography Of The BergbüchleinWHEN Georgius Agricola, in 155o, dedicated his now famous De re Metallica to the rulers of Saxony, Thuringia, Meissen, and other, smaller principalities, he included in his review of previous works on
Jan 1, 1949
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Institute of Metals Division - Habit Phenomenon in the Martensitic TransformationBy E. S. Machlin, Morris Cohen
GRENINGER and Troiano' were the first to establish the fact that the habit planes of mar-tensitic products are usually planes of high indices. In steels containing 0.55 to 1.4 pct C, the habit pl
Jan 1, 1952
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Evaporation Loss Of Petroleum Theories And Their ApplicationBy J. H. Wiggins
This paper first pictures the economic phase of evaporation losses and the actual evaporative conditions in handling and storing crude and gasoline in the United States; then follows a discussion of s
Jan 7, 1924
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Introduction (6ff4bb41-6808-4ff3-be32-244165b7a0f1)By William E. Ford, Edward Salisbury Dana
1. THE SCIENCE OF MINERALOGY treats of those inorganic species called minerals, which together in rock masses or in isolated form make up the material of the crust of the earth, and of other bodies in
Jan 1, 1922
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Production Engineering - A Resume of the Application of Gravel Packing to Oil Wells in California (T. P. 1079, with discussion)By W. A. Clark
The production of sand in an oil well increases operating costs because of abnormal wear in subsurface equipment, the necessity for frequent cleanouts, and the need for a means of disposing of the san
Jan 1, 1940
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Production Engineering - A Resume of the Application of Gravel Packing to Oil Wells in California (T. P. 1079, with discussion)By W. A. Clark
The production of sand in an oil well increases operating costs because of abnormal wear in subsurface equipment, the necessity for frequent cleanouts, and the need for a means of disposing of the san
Jan 1, 1940
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New York Paper - Efficient Ventilation of Metal Mines (with Discussion)By D. Harrington
Efficient ventilation of metal mines consists in having such complete control of air currents that there is always supplied at placcs where men work sufficient moving air to allow working at maximum c
Jan 1, 1923
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Troy Paper - The Northern Serpentine Belt in Chester County, PennsylvaniaBy Persifor Frazer
MR. Theodore D. Rand has made some interesting observations on the serpentines of Chester and Delaware counties, Penna., in which he suggests that the outcrops of this rock are detached from each othe
Jan 1, 1884
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New York Paper - Efficient Ventilation of Metal Mines (with Discussion)By D. Harrington
Efficient ventilation of metal mines consists in having such complete control of air currents that there is always supplied at placcs where men work sufficient moving air to allow working at maximum c
Jan 1, 1923