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Papers - Classification - Commercial Description of Pennsylvania AnthraciteBy E. W. Parker
Anthracite, as sent to market, comes under three general terms of description: characteristics, source and size. Anthracite is generally classified as white ash, red ash, or Lykens Valley. The whit
Jan 1, 1930
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Index (54e08b1b-666e-4964-a25d-adf6d3feaf43)The following discussion occurred on the afternoon of Sept,. 22, 1930, as part of the fall meeting of the Iron and Steel Division at Chicago. About seventy-five men attended this session. C. B. Murray
Jan 1, 1930
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The Utilisation of Pyrites in Pulp and Acid ManufactureBy Horace Freeman
The sulphur consumed in Canadian pulp mills and acid plants is worth approximately three million dollars annually and amounts to one hundred and fifty thousand long tons, all of which is imported from
Jan 1, 1930
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IC 6285 Milling Methods And Costs At The Harmony Mines, Baker, Idaho ? IntroductionBy R. Duncan Gardner
This paper describing the milling practice at the concentrator of the Harmony Mines Co. is one of a series being; prepared by the Bureau of Mines on milling methods and costs in the United States.
Jan 1, 1930
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The Flash-Point Test for LeadIF lead be heated with concentrated sulphuric acid two distinct actions will usually be observed. In the first, bubbles begin to be evolved more or less rapidly from the lead, and in the second, which
Jan 1, 1930
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RI 3045 Concentration Tests On The Manganiferous Iron Ores Of The Cuyuna District, MinnesotaBy F. D. DeVaney
[In the course of the investigation by the U. S. Bureau of Mines and the Missouri School of Mines and Metallurgy at the Mississippi Valley experiment Station at Rolla, Mo., on the beneficiation of the
Jan 1, 1930
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Papers - Classification - Commercial Classifications of Coal (With Discussion)By F. R. Wadleigh
There are in commercial use today in the United States various classifications of coal, each based on one or more characteristics. The bases of these classifications may be described as follows: Ge
Jan 1, 1930
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RI 3017 A New Flame Safety-Lamp Testing And Demonstration Apparatus ? Reason For The New ApparatusBy W. P. Yant
[At the majority of mines where flame safety lamps are used either as working lights or as a means of detecting gas, no check it made on this condition of the various parts of the lamp and their assem
Jan 1, 1930
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Lead Refining at the Bunker Hill Smelter of the Bunker Hill and Sullivan Mining and Concentrating Co.By Alfred Beasley
LEAD-REFINING practice at the. Bunker Hill differs to some extent from that of other United States refineries using the Parkes process, in that the Bunker Hill-has reverted to a custom used years ago
Jan 1, 1930
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Innovations In Copper Leaching, Employing Ferric Sulphate-Sulphuric Acid - IntroductionBy Harmon E. Keyes
Many organizations, including the Bureau of Mines, have made intensive studies of the application of leaching methods to relatively small low-grade disseminated deposits of copper ores, containing bot
Jan 1, 1930
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Zinc Smelting From A Chemical And Thermodynamic Viewpoint - IntroductionBy C. G. Maier
The fundamental chemistry of zinc smelting, especially that part dealing with the chemical reduction of the zinc-oxide content of a roasted zinc ore, has been discussed by metallurgists in some detail
Jan 1, 1930
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IC 6293 Shrinkage Stoping ? IntroductionBy Chas. F. Jackson
During the past year a special study was made of shrinkage stoping A large number of mines in the United States and Canada which employ this method were visited and their practices were discussed with
Jan 1, 1930
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RI 2997 Engineering Study Of The Seminole Area Seminole And Pottawatomie Counties, Oklahoma ? IntroductionBy R. R. Brandenthaler
The development of the Seminole area into one of the major oil-producing sections of the country has been accompanied by many innovations and departures from former methods of development. On July 1,
Jan 1, 1930
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IC 6329 Sulphur - IntroductionBy Robert H. Ridgway
This circular outlines salient facts regarding the sulphur industry of the United States and the world. It is founded chiefly upon published information available in the literature of the subject. The
Jan 1, 1930
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IC 6312 Radium ? ForewordBy Paul M. Tyler
The literature on radium is already voluminous, but mcuh of it is too technical to be intelligible to the average reader, and there is no single publication that covers certain economic features of th
Jan 1, 1930
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Rock-Strata Gases Of The Cripple Creek District, Colo., And Their Effect On Mining - IntroductionBy E. H. Denny
The presence in the Cripple Creek district, Colo., of irrespirable gas or gases, generally known to consist mainly of nitrogen and carbon dioxide, has been recognized by members of the mining industry
Jan 1, 1930
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Destructive and Non-destructive Tests of WeldsBy J. R. Dawson, A. B. Kinzel
THE purpose of testing is to determine whether the material in question is identical in all essential respects with similar material which has given satisfactory service. The most common method of sec
Jan 1, 1930
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Institute of Metals ActiveBy AIME AIME
THE Tuesday afternoon session", H. A. Bedworth chairman and T. S. Fuller, vice-chairman, was opened with D. J. McAdam, Jr.'s paper entitled "The Influence of Cyclic Stress on Corrosion." This pap
Jan 1, 1930
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Mining Geology in 1929By R. J. Colony
MINING geology does not lend itself - very readily to a review embracing "improvements in methods," as perhaps do shop practices or laboratory procedures. The "methods" used in mining geology are si
Jan 1, 1930
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Suggested Solution of the Silver ProblemBy HARRINCTON EMERSON
UNEMPLOYMENT is the most ominous shadow ahead of the industrial nations today. Only two great industrial countries are free from unemployment, France and the Soviet Commonwealth. In France the social
Jan 1, 1930