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Flotation Practice in the Coeur d'Alene District, Idaho (00151dae-c0f5-44ff-bc85-7888e7165cc2)By A. W. Fahrenwald
FLOTATION practice in Idaho is now about 13 years old. The advance has been steady during these 13 years. The operators have been alert to take advantage of the newest developments and they have thems
Jan 1, 1927
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Bulletin 229 Fifty Nine Coal Mine FiresBy G. S. Rice, J. W. Paul, M. W. VONBERNEWITZ
This bulletin abstracts and reviews essential details of reports on 59 fires in different coal mines in the United States, describes the circumstances of origin and the methods of controlling or extin
Jan 1, 1927
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Bulletin 239 Iron Ore (Hematite) Mining Practice in the Birmingham District, AlabamaBy W. R. Crane
Mining of the red iron ores of the Birmingham district, Alabama, has _gone on energetically for the past 50 years and has created a large iron and steel manufacturing center, the only important one in
Jan 1, 1927
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RI 2784 Future Timber Supply For Coal Mines - What One Company Is DoingBy L. D. Tracy
"IntroductionOne of the problems which the coal-mining industry must solve in the next few years is the redaction of its ever-increasing timber bill. This includes pit posts, mine tees, timber sets, a
Nov 1, 1926
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RI 2776 Hydrogen Sulphide Poisoning In the Texas Panhandle, Big Lake, Texas, And McCamey, Texas OilfieldsBy W. P. Yant, H. C. Fowler
"INTRODUCTIONHydrogen sulphide is probably the most toxic gas associated with crude oil. Hydrocarbon (petroleum) vapors themselves are harmful to the human system, but hydrogen sulphide, when present,
Oct 1, 1926
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RI 2761 Magnetic Concentration of Flue Dust..Birmingham Dist.By Oscar Lee, B. W. Gandrud, F. D. DeVaney
"IntroductionFlue dust which results from the smelting of ores containing appreciable quantities of fines is one of the troublesome products of iron blast-furnace practice. Gases issuing from the furn
Jul 1, 1926
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RI 2755 The Sizing Action Of A Coal Washing TableBy Byron M. Bird
"The prevailing practice of washing unsized coal, 1/2-inch and finer, to 1/8-inch and finer, on a table is subject to certain limitations which are commonly overlooked. In some instances good results
Jun 1, 1926
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RI 2743 Coal Mining Royalties And Leasing Conditions In Vermilion And Edgar Counties, Illinois (District VIII) (ff64c1c3-266d-4549-969a-69f8d415a2e0)By L. D. Tracy
"This paper represents work conducted by the Bureau of Mines in cooperation with the Illinois Geological Survey and the Engineering Experiment Station of the University of Illinois.IntroductionThe pre
Apr 1, 1926
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Notes on Gas Lift ProcessBy R. P. McLaughlin
EXACT information as to performance of the gas lift from the mechanical engineering standpoint is hard to obtain. Several hundred wells are now producing in California fields by means of the gas lift,
Jan 12, 1926
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Acceleration Of Rate Of Oxidation Of Ferrous Iron In Presence Of Copper, And Its Application To "Heap Leaching" ProcessBy E. Posnjak
IT is rather the general belief that acidified, solutions of ferrous salts are readily oxidized when in contact with air, and often elaborate pre-cautions are taken to prevent it. This, however, is no
Jan 12, 1926
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Some Analytical Principles Concerning Oil Recovery By Forced DriveBy Stanley Herold
As an accompaniment to the interesting papers which discuss the practical aspects of forced drive, or flooding, in our oil fields, and to others which deal with laboratory or field tests on the same s
Jan 11, 1926
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Specific Efficiency of the Blast FurnaceBy Richard Franchot
IN the inevitable conquest of the blast furnace by metallurgical science in the solution of the problem of how to make more and better iron or to burn less coke, or both, it is highly desirable first
Jan 9, 1926
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Discussion Of The Papers Presented At The Iron And Steel Open-Hearth Session At The New York Meeting, February, 1926CONTENTS PAGE PEIRCE, CARL-Making Rimmed Steel. Discussed by L. F. Reinartz. H. D. Hibbard, C. L. Kinney, Jr., A. H. Woodward, V. B. Buck, A. L. Feild, J. V. W. Reynders 1 SCHROEDER, F. W., and L
Jan 4, 1926
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The Iron-Tungsten SystemBy W. P. Sykes
IN CONNECTION with a study of tungsten steels, Honda and Murakami1 reported an investigation of the system iron-tungsten. This report included a tentative equilibrium diagram, photomicrographs of vari
Jan 2, 1926
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The Mt. Union Sand-Flotation Plant For Preparing Bituminous CoalBy T. M. Chance
THE first bituminous coal cleaning-plant to use the sand-flotation process1 was placed in operation on Oct. 1, 1925, at the tipple of the East Broad Top Railroad & Coal Co., at Mt. Union, Pa. The gen
Jan 2, 1926
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American Glass Sands, Their Properties And PreparationBy Charles Fettke
IN THE present day manufacture of glass nearly pure quartz sands are used almost exclusively as the source of the silica, which is the major constituent of all common varieties of glass. Ordinary soda
Jan 2, 1926
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Modification And Properties Of Sand-Cast Aluminum-Silicon AlloysBy Robert Archer
IT is now well known that the structure of aluminum-silicon alloys can be refined in a rather remarkable manner, with consequent improvement of physical properties, by certain treatments applied to th
Jan 2, 1926
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Annealing Of Commercial Copper To Prevent Embrittlement By Reducing GasesBy Susasn Leiter
THAT oxygen in copper has been a source of trouble is well known and that that trouble has been real in the commercial world has been shown by Fuller.1 Moore and Beckinsale's paper2 at the annual
Jan 2, 1926
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Improvements at Bellevue Mine, 1921-1925By F. E. Millett
The following notes deal chiefly with changes from steam to electric drives, or, in the case of the Bellevue pumps, from air to electric. Where electric power can be purchased or generated cheaply it
Jan 1, 1926
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Underground Operations at the Dome MinesBy John B. Phillips
The mine is entered by a central vertical shaft, strongly timbered, and containing two compartments-one for the passenger cage, the other for the large skips bringing the ore to the surface. A man-way
Jan 1, 1926