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This Phosphate Industry of OursBy Chester A. Fulton
SUPPLYING as it does a necessity for healthy animal and vegetable phosphate production is a most important industry. We human beings also are animal as this war so surely proves. Unlike many other ele
Jan 1, 1944
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Variety of Engineers Wanted by U. S. Civil ServiceBy Ernest J. Stocking
ENGINEERS are the key men in our war program today. Upon the technical knowledge and skill of the engineer and upon his administrative and executive abilities rests the entire success for the producti
Jan 1, 1942
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PART V - Communications - Some Observations on Crack Extension in Two-Phase MaterialsBy W. W. Gerberich
SINCE the original formulation of fracture mechanics concepts,'y2 relatively little work has related the fracture mechanics description of metal behavior on a gross, structural component scale to
Jan 1, 1968
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World Phosphate Rock Outlook Through The Late 1970'sBy M. C. Manderson
Abstract-The sharp drop in world phosphate demand that took place in 1975, due to temporarily high prices, now seems to be reversing itself. And prices for both phosphate rock and phosphate fertilizer
Jan 1, 1978
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Enrollment in Mineral Engineering Schools at All-Time HighBy F. William Bloecher, William B. Plank
CURRENTLY 12,892 students are enrolled in the mineral engineering schools of the United States and Canada, marking an all-time record high for these schools. It shows a remarkably rapid recovery from
Jan 1, 1947
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Engineering and Illinois Coal MiningBy John Garcia
THE presence of carbon de terre along the banks of the Illinois river was noted by the members of the Joliet and Marquette expeditions in 1673, and that may be referred to as the birthday of coal in t
Jan 2, 1927
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Nickel-Bearing Alloys in the Production and Refining of PetroleumBy Byron B. Morton
NICKEL-BEARING alloys are associated with petroleum in the fields of exploration, production, and refining. In the first- named field the geologist of today makes use of such instruments as the seismo
Jan 1, 1935
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Utah and Montana Paper - Silver-Mining and Milling at Butte, MontanaBy William P. Blake
This camp is just now startled by the alarming suggestion that unless there shall speedily be an appreciation in the value of silver, and a decrease in the cost of salt, it will be prudent business po
Jan 1, 1888
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Rock Bolt Reinforcement System To Stabilise Shaft Intersections And Pit Bottom Roadways During Underground ReconstructionBy Ali M. Heidarieh Zadeh, Raghu N. Singh
The paper presents a stability investigation of shaft intersections and pit bottom roadways in the vicinity of upcast and downcast shafts at a colliery in the U.K. Aschemeof instrumentation was aimed
Jan 1, 1982
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PART IV - Papers - A Model for Concentrated Interstitial Solid Solutions; Its Application to Solutions of Carbon in Gamma IronBy Thomas L. Garrard, James A. Sprague, Rex B. McLellan, Samuel J. Horowitz
A simple rnodel for interstitial solid solutions has been devised in which each solute atom interacts with the solzlent lattice in such a way as to exclude an integral number of nearest-neighbor sites
Jan 1, 1968
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Efficiency-Engineering Applied To Mining.By GLENVILTE A. COLLINS
(Presented at a Meeting of the Spokane Local Section of the Institute, Feb. 17, 1912, and accepted for publication in the Bulletin. ) WHILE I am not at the present time engaged in active mine-managem
Sep 1, 1912
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Institute of Metals Division - Strain Aging Effects in Arc-Cast MolybdenumBy G. W. Brock
Experiments in the form of aging of overstrained tension specimens and elevated temperature tension testing, have been carried out on recrystallized arc-cast molybdenum. The aging behavior of molybden
Jan 1, 1962
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Milling Complex Gold-Silver Ore at La Mazata, MexicoBy O. P. Dolph
SPANIARDS were probably the first to mine the rich surface ore in the veins cutting the rhyolite capping that outcrops on the hills of La Mazata, oil the Allyones side of the Magdalena valley in Jalis
Jan 1, 1938
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Australia's Slow Entry Into The Nuclear AgeBy Eugene Guccione
Australia could eventually become a major world supplier of uranium oxide-but how quickly that happens depends on the outcome of a highly complex and emotional battle among different special interests
Jan 1, 1977
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Physical Metallurgy - Orientation Changes during Recrystallization in Silicon Ferrite (Metals Technology, April 1945)By C. G. Dunn
With respect to theories of recrystalliza-tion in metals plastically deformed. it has been said that the present status of this subject is far from satisfactory.1 It may also be said that before any m
Jan 1, 1945
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The Ladies Meet, TooBy AIME AIME
THE annual meeting of the Woman's Auxiliary to the A.I. M.E. is always held in New York, in con- junction with the annual meeting of the Institute in February. Business sessions, teas, dances, a
Jan 1, 1930
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Part II - Papers - Elastic and Allied Models for Energies of Point DefectsBy G. B. Gibbs
Various semiempirical equations which relate defect-formation energies and entropies with elastic and thermal properties of a metal crystal are shown to be related by a simple model for lattice energy
Jan 1, 1968
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Leaching Copper from Worked-Out Areas of the Ray Mines, ArizonaBy Robert W. Thomas
LEACHING of mined-out areas at the Arizona property of the Ray Mines Division, Kennecott Copper Corp., was started on Jan. 20, 1.937, and by July 1, 1938, 10,000,000 lb. of copper had been produced by
Jan 1, 1938
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Local Section News (c6877afe-cd76-43fe-b954-4ef8c11b65d8)NEW YORK LOCAL SECTION Executive Committee L. W. FRANCIS, Chairman WILLARD S. MORSE, Vice-Chairman THOMAS T. READ, Secretary, Woolworth Bldg., New York, N. Y J P. A. MOSMAN, Treasurer Louis D.
Jan 6, 1914