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How Design Improvements Boost Walking Draglines' ProductivityBy Tegner C. Johnson
Just a few years ago, my company was referred to as the Marion Steam Shovel Company. Though we still make shovels, both two and eight-crawler types, the eight-crawler stripping shovel appears to have
Jan 10, 1974
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All Resources Pooled to Produce Aviation Gasoline, Toluene, and Other War NecessitiesBy Walter Miller
NOW, after a year's continued impact of war, the task of the petroleum-refining industry stands out clearly and looms up in larger aspect. This time it is not, as it was so largely in the first W
Jan 1, 1943
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Laboratory Practice at the Fidelity Coal WasheryBy C. MeCulloch
A NOVEL practice in the bituminous coal industry is the accelerated method of burning coal to ash used in the laboratory of the Fidelity washery of the United Electric Coal Companies, Du Quoin, Ill. D
Jan 1, 1937
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Concepts in Process Design of Mills – Gaudin LectureBy L. G. Austin
My first contact with industrial milling was during the time I worked in the electricity generating industry in the United Kingdom. In visits to power stations to investigate either deposits in the bo
Jan 1, 1985
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Institute of Metals Division - The Selective Oxidation of Chromium in an Iron-Chromium- Nickel Alloy (TN)By R. P. Abendroth
This study is concerned with the kinetics of selective oxidation of chromium in a commercial Fe-Cr-Ni alloy. Selective oxidation of chromium in this alloy, by use of a low oxygen-potential atmosphere,
Jan 1, 1964
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Part VII – July 1969 – Papers - Kinetics of Grain Boundary Grooving in Chromium, Molybdenum, and TungstenBy B. C. Allen
Grain boundary grooving has been studied in chromium, molybdenum, and tungsten under a variety of conditions using high vacuum techniques and tantalum -gettered argon. The average surface free energy
Jan 1, 1970
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Preventive Maintenance Of Control Equipment For ExcavatorsBy M. Safiuddin
Within the mining industry, open-pit mining has progressed to a point where a 200-yard walking dragline is as conceivable today as a 35-yard dragline was just a few years ago. This is possible due to
Jan 9, 1967
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Power Plant Ash – A Neglected AssetBy Gerard C. Gambs
The electric utility industry is the largest customer of the U.S. coal industry, consuming nearly 50% of present coal production. By 1980, the electric utilities are expected to burn over 500 million
Jan 1, 1967
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PART XI – November 1967 - Papers - The Standard Free Energy of Formation of Certain Sulfides of Some Transition Elements and ZincBy Harold R. Larson, John F. Elliott
The standard free energies of formation of several nzetallic sulfides have been measured by a reversible electromotive-force cell employing stabilized zir-conia as the electrolyte. The oxygen potent
Jan 1, 1968
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Primary Gold In A Colorado Granite.By John B. Hastings
TEN miles from Hartsel, near Antelope springs, in Park county, Colorado, there is a large area of unconsolidated lake beds, which are interesting because at least a part of the lacustrine sands contai
Jan 5, 1908
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A Micrographic Study Of The Cleavage Of Hydrogenized FerriteBy Carl A. Zapffe, George A. Moore
IN a previous publication from this laboratory1 the conclusion was drawn that the embrittling effect of occluded hydrogen on iron and steel must result from the precipitation of the gas within small o
Jan 1, 1943
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ConstructionBy T. A. Rickard
The writing that is effective is woven with a fine texture into an agreeable pattern; it is free from knots, loose threads, and stray fluff. The instrument that weaves this literary fabric, whether it
Jan 1, 1931
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Part IX – September 1969 – Papers - Interaction of Slip Dislocations with Twins in Hcp MetalsBy M. H. Yoo
Possible interactions of the perfect dislocations of six slip systems or the c dislocation with the (10i2f (ioii), {ioIi}(ioiZ), {1122}(1123), and {1121}(ii26) type twins in hcp metals have been analy
Jan 1, 1970
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John Fritz Medal Awarded To Dr. James DouglasAn Appreciation of Dr. Douglas by Dr. ALBERT R. LEDOUX The Bulletins of the American Institute of Mining Engineers and the program of the International Engineering Congress, held last September at Sa
Jan 1, 1916
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The Presidents of the Four National Engineering Societies (18c33f16-98f5-483e-8583-8ac0b32046a7)Edward Payson Mathewson EDWARD PAYSON MATHEWSON, President of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgi-cal Engineers, was born in Montreal, Canada, Oct. 16, 1864, of Scotch-Irish ancestors. Af
Jan 3, 1923
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The Mining Engineer's Chestfull of BooksBy H. J. C. MAC DONALD
THE mining engineer must have a chest of books snug enough for a camelback or to be stowed away in a canoe; at the lowest possible cost, as he needs it the most in those early years when he earns the
Jan 1, 1925
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Philadelphia, Pa. Paper - American Mining Machinery in Mexico and Central AmericaBy F. H. McDowell
For more than two hundred years Mexico has been enriching the world from her inexhaustible wealth of precious metals. From this source alone, over three thousand five hundred millions of dollars have
Jan 1, 1885
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California's Mineral Resources for War PurposesThe State Mining Bureau of California under the direction of Fletcher Hamilton, State Mineralogist, is starting a field campaign to report on the economic minerals of California, which have an importa
Jan 6, 1917
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Almaden World?s Greatest Mercury MineBy Evan Bennett
ALMADEN is Arabic for "the mine." The definite article is properly used, for no mercury mine in the world compares with it for richness and volume of ore, produced and potential. After more than twent
Jan 1, 1948
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Institute of Metals Division - The Effect of Procedures in Quantitative Metallography for Volume-Fraction AnalysisBy John W. Cahn, John E. Hilliard
Single crystals of copper and silicon-iron were cold rolled in orientations chosen to produce individually the major components of the poly crystalline deformation texture. The orientation dependence
Jan 1, 1962