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Review of the Month (febfadf1-61cc-49e9-8d22-b4e4d25b0f08)AT THE beginning of February the British Government announced acceptance of the American terms for funding the war debt, the main features-being as follows: Interest rate of 3 per cent. for the first
Jan 2, 1923
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Subsidence Around A Salt WellBy C. M. Young
WHEREVER salt is extracted from the ground as an artificial brine produced by pumping down fresh water to dissolve the salt, subsidence of the overburden is a possibility, though apparently few cases
Jan 2, 1926
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Plans of the Petroleum Division for 1937 M. AlbertsonFollowing the usual custom, three meetings are planned for the year. The Mid-Continent meeting will be held at Oklahoma City, Okla., Oct. 7 and 8, and the California meeting is planned for Los Angeles
Jan 1, 1937
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Teaching Geophysics in a Department of PhysicsBy David Keys
APPLIED geophysics is the youngest child of that old branch of learning, that has been known from Aristotle's time as physics-the constitution and laws of nature. The mother science, with the hel
Jan 1, 1938
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Arizona Paper - Method of Mining TalcBy F. R. Hewitt
The methods of mining talc are simple, and in western North Carolina are almost entirely by open cut and quarry. The larger part of the talc of this section lies in various-sized "veins''. i
Jan 1, 1917
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Mining and Metallurgy - A. F. Greaves-Walker, New Education Division Chairman.By AIME AIME
ONE of the few students to enter the world's first department of ceramic engineering a few years after its establishment at Ohio State University, A. F. Greaves-Walker has since established an in
Jan 1, 1942
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Biographical Notices - Benjamin Bowden LawrenceThe passing of Benjamin Bowden Lawrence in January, 1921, was a distinct loss to the engineering profession. Mr. Lawrence had a genius for reviving abandoned mines and developing them into substantial
Jan 1, 1922
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Editorial – The Cross RoadsCOLLECTIVE bargaining, hereto-fore loudly proclaimed as one of the stout timbers of the Republic, has passed from the picture. The coup de gr[a]ce was struck by the President of the United States when
Jan 1, 1952
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On The Wasting Of Coal At The MinesBy J. W. Harden
AT our meeting in October last we saw in operation at Pittsburgh, the comparatively modern process of the utilization of small coal by washing, by an arrangement similar to that of Bérard or Morrison.
Jan 1, 1873
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Biographical Notices - Benjamin Bowden LawrenceThe passing of Benjamin Bowden Lawrence in January, 1921, was a distinct loss to the engineering profession. Mr. Lawrence had a genius for reviving abandoned mines and developing them into substantial
Jan 1, 1922
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Papers - Smelting - Waste-Heat Boiler Practice - Waste-heat Boiler Practice at the Anaconda Reverberatory PlantBy George Tryon, E. A. Barnard
The importance of the conservation of the waste heat contained in copper reverberatory furnace gases was realized very early by those in charge of operation at Anaconda. The first attempt to utilize i
Jan 1, 1934
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Production - Domestic - Production and Development in West Texas and New Mexico for 1932By William Victor Vietti
West Texas and New Mexico have been overshadowed by the dcvelopment in East Texas to such an extent that the area has been placed on a settled production basis by most of the operators. Considerable d
Jan 1, 1933
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Part VI – June 1968 - Papers - Compilation of the Modes of Elastic Wave Propagation and the Orientation Dependence of Dislocation Damping in CopperBy Robert E. Green, Edmund G. Henneke
The velocities of the three possible modes of elastic wave propagation have been calculated for single-crystal copper at 1-deg intervals throughout the standard stereographic triangle. The results ar
Jan 1, 1969
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A Metallographic Investigation Of Transverse-Fissure Rails With Special Reference To High-Phosphorus Streaks -DiscussionJAMES E. HOWARD,* Washington, D. C. (written discussion?). -Mr. Comstock, in his classification of the possible causes of transverse fissures, has not quite caught the point of view of the writer. It
Jan 3, 1919
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Biographical Notice - Frederick W. MatthiessenF. W. Matthiessen, who, with E. C. Hegeler, of La Salle, was one of the creators of the zinc industry in the-United States, was born in Altona, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, Mar. 5, 1835. He was one of
Jan 1, 1920
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Discussion of Papers - Hydraulic Transport of Broken CoalBy W. D. Haentjens, A. P. Pipilen, M. Weintraub, A. A. Orning
W. D. Haentjens (Barrett, Haentjens and Co., Hazleton, Pa.) — The authors are to be complimented on undertaking a project which has little available experimental data. There are so many variables in t
Jan 1, 1965
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Julius Bernhard Haffner Director, AIMEBy AIME
J. B. Haffner, or "Barney" as he is known to his wide circle of friends, was born at Landskrona, Sweden, on Christmas Day, 1886. He attended grade and preparatory schools there and then went to the Ro
Jan 1, 1948
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Drilling and Blasting at Bagdad CopperBy Olaf Hondrum
CHURN drilling equipment at Bagdad consists of two Bucyrus Erie 27-T model drills and one 22-T drill with gasoline engines. The drilling tools weigh approximately 1600 lb. The holes are drilled with 7
Jan 1, 1950
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Of Mr. Fackenthal's paper on a Peculiar Siliceous Efflorescence upon Pig-IronProf. Henry M Howe, New York: It is extremely probable that this efflorescence of silica is due to the liquation either of silicon or of a silicide, and the subsequent oxidation of the silicon to sili
Jan 1, 1901