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RI 3553 Progress Reports - Metallurgical Division - 43. Cationic Reagents In The Flotation Of Silica From Gypsum Ores ? IntroductionBy J. Bruce Clemmer
[Gypsum is one of the most important nonmetallic c minerals, as is indicated by the fact that the United States consumed approximately 3,500,000 tons of natural and calcined gypsum in 1937. The buildi
Jan 1, 1941
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RI 3578 Softening Water With Nonmetallic Minerals ? IntroductionBy S. J. Broderick
[The term "nonmetallic minerals? as commonly used is the mining industry, refers to those minerals of industrial importance that are mined essentially for uses other than for the metals contained. The
Jan 1, 1941
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The Ore Deposits of Nickel Plate Mountain, Hedley, B.C.By Paul Billingsley
NICKEL Plate mountain coincides closely with that portion of the Hedley mining district which is of economic interest. From it has come almost the entire past production, and the active mines of the p
Jan 1, 1941
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Anglo-American ResponsibilitiesBy Max W. Ball
YOU have been kind enough to ask me to speak to you on "The War and Anglo-American Relations." A speaker always takes the liberty of putting his own interpretation on the scope of his subject. I am go
Jan 1, 1941
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RI 3572 Constancy Of B. T. U. Value Of "Pure" Coal (48044991-601e-44c1-a820-a05307574f57)By J. F. Barkley
[There 1 s [\ general conce:!?t in the coal trade tha t the ;noi sture-and ash-free B. t.'I. of coal from t.he oome seam, and surely from the same mine, is substantially a cor.stant: that calcula
Jan 1, 1941
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RI 3563 Drainage Characteristics Of Alabama Coals ? IntroductionBy B. W. Gandrud
[The Bureau of Mines is conducting an extensive investigation of coal preparation in the Alabama coal fields in cooperation with the University of Alabama and coal-mine operators. In this investigatio
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Simple Method for Detectilig Susceptibility of 18-8 Steels to Intergranular Corrosion (T.P. 1343)By H. W. Russell, H Pray, Paul D. MILLER
It is known that austenitic chromium-nickel steels that have free carbide in the grain boundaries are subject to intergranu-lar corrosion. It is difficult to detect such a susceptible condition in a f
Jan 1, 1941
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Ore Dressing Laboratories, School of Mines, Laval University, Quebec CityBy C. E. Rodgers
WHEN the writer was engaged early last year by Canadian Comstock and its subsidiary, the Metropolitan Electric Company, to act as Consulting Mining Engineer in connection with the layout and equipment
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Subboundary Structures of Recrystallized Iron (T.P. 1236)By N. P. Goss
Asterism appearing in X-ray Laue diagrams is an extremely sensitive index of changes in the internal structures of individual grains of polycrystalline metals. It indicates the existence of various fo
Jan 1, 1941
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The Peril of Declining Mineral WealthBy C. M. Campbell
IN 1934 Newfoundland, after extravagant operation based on exaggerated ideas of what she had to work with, became bankrupt, ceased to be a self-governing Dominion, and passed into the hands of a Commi
Jan 1, 1941
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Geology of the Falcon Lake Stock, Southeastern ManitobaBy G. M. Brownell
THE Falcon Lake stock is a small igneous mass, 2.6 square miles in area, which has intruded a belt of older lavas and metamorphosed sediments. It is well exposed and the entire area of its outcrop is
Jan 1, 1941
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Mechanical Loading vs Grizzlies at the Sladen-Malartic MineBy John Kostuik
AT the Sladen-Malartic mine, a number of orebodies have been mined, some by shrinkage and others by open sub-level scopes, from which the ore is handled either through a grizzly system or by mechanica
Jan 1, 1941
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Some Essential Safety Factors In Tunneling - IntroductionBy D. Harrington
For many years the Federal Bureau of Mines-in cooperation with other agencies-has been making investigations and compiling and publishing reports and statistics on accidents in the various branches of
Jan 1, 1941
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Mechanism Of Fluid Displacement In SandsBy S. E. Buckley, M. C. Leverett
THE production of oil is accomplished as a result of its displacement from the reservoir by either gas or water, and the amount of oil recovery is limited by the extent to which the displacing gas or
Jan 1, 1941
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RI 3557 Performance Of Subbituminous Coal In A Typical Underfeed Domestic Stoker ? Introduction (2f6729a8-fefc-4b01-8699-b37e67b450b1)By V. F. Parry
[Approximatel~r 7-1/2 illion tOlls of subb1tnminous coals are mined an-nuall in Colorado, Wyo~ing, and Montana, of which 50 percent probably reaches dome ,-tic conswno:os. r:L'he moi s t'_re
Jan 1, 1941
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Diamond-Drill Stoping at Waite-AmuletBy A. A. McCloskey
APPROXIMA TEL Y 95 percent of Waite-Amulet's Lower A orebody will be mined by diamond-drill stoping. This method of stoping was developed, and has been successfully applied, at the Noranda mine i
Jan 1, 1941
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IC 7171 Developments In The American Petroleum Industry, 1914-19 Exploration, Drilling, Production, And Transportation (A Review And Digest) ? BackgroundBy H. C. Fowler
Technical developments in the American petroleum industry as regards exploration, drilling, production, and transportation were characterized by many anomalous conditions during the half decade 1914-1
Jan 1, 1941
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Simple Method For Detecting Susceptibility Of 18-8 Steels To Intergranular CorrosionBy H. W. Russell, Paul D. MILLER
IT is known that austenitic chromium-nickel steels that have free carbide in the grain boundaries are subject to intergranular corrosion. It is difficult to detect such a susceptible condition in a fa
Jan 1, 1941
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Solubility Of Oxygen In High-Purity CopperBy Arthur Phillips, E. N. Skinner
DURING the course of an experimental program concerned with the hydrogen embrittlement of copper containing oxygen in concentrations within the solubility limits it became necessary to make a critical
Jan 1, 1941
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IC 7172 Developments In Petroleum Refining Technology In The United States, 1914-19 ? IntroductionBy A. J. Kraemer
Few important improvements other than the development of cracking processes were made in technical petroleum refining from 1914 to 1919. Refiners were concerned mainly with enlarging their plants and
Jan 1, 1941