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Measurements of Physical Properties - Interstitial Water Determination by an Evaporation MethodBy E. S. Messer
A knowledge of the magnitude of the irreducible inter.;titial water in a porous medium is so important to petroleum engineering that its determination has become routine in core analyses. The metho
Jan 1, 1951
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A Rational Basis for the Conservation of Mineral ResourcesBy Joseph A. Holmes
Iv all new movements unavoidable misapprehensions arise, which should be cleared away, lest they retard the progress of the movement itself. An impression has gone abroad that the movement for conser
May 1, 1909
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Geology and Non-Metallics - Clay Prospecting and Mining in California (with Discussion)By W. F. Dietrich
This paper deals with the methods of mining the high-grade clays of California. The fact that the majority of the clay pits in the state are operated on a scale that is small by comparison with most m
Jan 1, 1928
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Washington D.C. Paper - On the Comparative Efficiency of Fane and Positive BlowersBy H. M. Howe
On commencing the construction of the Orford Company's copper smelting works, at Bergen Point, N. J., I endeavored to convince our President, Mr. W. E. C. Eustis, by actual tests, that at the pre
Jan 1, 1882
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Minerals Beneficiation - A Calorimetric Method for Studying Grinding in a Tumbling MediumBy A. Kenneth Schellinger
DURING the comminution of a brittle material in the presence of dry air, no known phase change or chemical reaction takes place. The energy changes associated with the comminution are those of the tra
Jan 1, 1952
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Leaching of Copper by Fungi (f956c822-d769-4a2a-9463-cb7cbef0f05d)By M. E. Volin, F. H. Erbisch, G. M. Wenberg
Bacterial leaching of copper and uranium is practiced under acidic conditions in environments furnishing sulfur and iron. However, many mineral deposits do not have these conditions; the chalcocite an
Jan 1, 1972
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Symposia - Symposium on Hardenability - Relationship between Hardenability and Percentage of Martensite in Some Low-Alloy Steels (Metals Tech., Sept. 1945, T.P. 1800 with discussion)By M. A. Orehoski, J. M. Hodge
It is now generally conceded that if a steel is to develop optimum physical properties in the conventionally quenched and tempered condition, the microstruc- ture after quenching should consist who
Jan 1, 1947
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Symposia - Symposium on Hardenability - Relationship between Hardenability and Percentage of Martensite in Some Low-Alloy Steels (Metals Tech., Sept. 1945, T.P. 1800 with discussion)By J. M. Hodge, M. A. Orehoski
It is now generally conceded that if a steel is to develop optimum physical properties in the conventionally quenched and tempered condition, the microstruc- ture after quenching should consist who
Jan 1, 1947
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Institute of Metals Division - Secondary Recrystallization in CopperBy F. H. Wilson, M. L. Kronberg
The low temperature recrystalliza-tion of very heavily rolled copper produces a fine grained structure with a high degree of preferred orientation. Additional heating to within a few hundred degrees o
Jan 1, 1950
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Propeller-type Fans for Mine VentilationBy T. H. Troller
FOR a long time propeller-type fans have been considered a very adequate means to move great quantities of air against small static pres-sures. They have been in use for this purpose in mines, as well
Jan 1, 1936
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Virginia: 1820-1834In 1820, the Board of Public Works was considering some improvements to the canal, in order to reduce the cost of transportation, and in its annual report for that year gives a description of the meth
Jan 1, 1942
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Pittsburgh Parper - The Hygienie of MinesBy R. W. Raymond
[NoTE.—-This paper was presented at the Pittsburgh meeting in a partially completed form, and I fully expected to obtain, before the period of its publication, both the data and the leisure required f
Jan 1, 1880
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Equilibria Of Liquid Iron And Slags Of The System CaO-MgO-FeO-SiO2By John Chipman, Karl L. Fetters
Tax relationship between the composition of the slag and that of the underlying metal during the refining of a heat of liquid steel may best be studied in the light of the two broad physicochemical co
Jan 1, 1941
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Institute of Metals Division - Effect of Dissolved Oxygen on the Grain Size of Annealed Pure Copper and Cu-A1 AlloysBy D. L. Wood
INTERNAL oxidation' is a process in which oxy-gen, diffused into a suitable alloy, causes precipitation of solute oxide particles as the oxidation front moves inward. During an investigation o
Jan 1, 1958
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Flocculation and Clarification of Slimes with Organic Flocculants (2b7a9410-b656-48c2-bf94-b19914b414dc)By George Gardner
THE application of wet cleaning processes for the beneficiation of bituminous coal has created in some localities a problem in the recovery and disposal of fine solids in the washery water. The maximu
Jan 1, 1939
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Optical Temperature Measurements In Open-Hearth FurnaceBy B. M. Larsen
SEVERAL articles have recently been published discussing the conditions necessary for accurate measurements of temperatures in the open-hearth steel furnace. In the course of a study of refractories s
Jan 8, 1926
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The History of the Relative Values of Gold and SilverBy Rossiter W. Raymond
Being a portion of the President's Address at New Haven, February 23d, 1875. As I have attempted briefly to show you, gentlemen, the present position of the mining and metallurgical industries o
Jan 1, 1875
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Clay Mineralogy Of Insoluble Residues In Marine EvaporitesBy Marc W. Bodine
Insoluble residues from three sequences of Paleozoic marine evaporates (Retsof salt bed in western New York, Salado Formation in southeastern New Mexico, and Paradox Member of the Hermosa Formation in
Jan 1, 1985
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A Modelling Study On The Pyrite Smelting ProcessBy Y. Fukunaka, Y. Kondo, Z. Asaki, S. Nakashita
The pyrite smelting process in which about half amount of sulfur is recovered from pyrite by thermal decomposition in an oxygen-free high-temperature combustion gas flow in the flash smelting furnace
Jan 1, 1976
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Stabilization - Stabilizing Influences for the Petroleum IndustryBy Earl Oliver
This paper is based on the formula that the petroleum industry is sick—find the cause, eliminate it, and the industry will get well. There is perhaps no difference of opinion that the cause is overpro
Jan 1, 1932