Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Technical Papers and Discussions - Ore Reduction and Slags - Production of Low-sulphur Sponge Iron (Metals Tech., Oct. 1946, T. P. 2093, with discussion)By R. C. Buehl, J. P. Riott, E. P. Shoub
Pilot-plant tests have demonstrated that it is possible to produce low-sulphur sponge iron (0.03 to 0.0; per cent sulphur) as a continuous process in an internally fired rotary kiln from iron ore or m
Jan 1, 1948
-
Geophysics - The Economics of Geophysics in Mining ExplorationBy J. J. Jakosky
The strategic importance of the metallic minerals in our industrial economy, and the declining rates of discovery have focused attention on means of exploration for new mineral deposits. A considerati
Jan 1, 1950
-
Technical Notes - Fishing Tools for Retrieving Gamma-Ray Logging ComponentsBy J. M. Ohm, C. M. Bunker
Two special tools for recovering gamma-ray probes and logging cable from drillholes have been designed by Ohm and Bunker and constructed by Ohm. Though intended specifically for U. S. Geological Surve
Jan 1, 1960
-
Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Developments in New York for 1938By C. A. Hartnagel, D. H. Newland
The market for Pennsylvania grade showed a drop both in demand and in prices, which reacted unfavorably on New York oil production, all of which comes under that classification. The output for the yea
Jan 1, 1939
-
Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Developments in New York for 1938By C. A. Hartnagel, D. H. Newland
The market for Pennsylvania grade showed a drop both in demand and in prices, which reacted unfavorably on New York oil production, all of which comes under that classification. The output for the yea
Jan 1, 1939
-
Minerals and Monopoly – Formula For Soviet StrengthBy Alexander Gakner
Since the end of World War II the Soviet Union has made great strides toward economic development of the country. Today it is firmly established as the world's second largest industrial power aft
Jan 6, 1960
-
Recent Advances In High Gradient Magnetic SeparationBy John A. Oberteuffer, Ionel Wechsler
High gradient magnetic separation, first introduced in 1968 as a means for the removal of very fine magnetic contaminants from clay, is no longer a new technology. Applications to a number of solid-so
Jan 1, 1980
-
Part IX – September 1968 - Papers - The Near-Surface Effect for Diffusion in SilverBy T. S. Lundy, R. A. Padgett
The fact that cobalt diffuses in silver at a much slower rate in a region near a free surface than in bulk material has been demonstrated in a variety of experiments. Various possible mechanisms of t
Jan 1, 1969
-
Part VIII – August 1968 – Communications - Experimental Support for "Hard" MartensiteBy C. L. Magee, H. W. Paxton
PREVIOUS workersl'% ave found that as-quenched ferrous martensites can be plastically deformed at low stresses. They have also found that the stress to obtain small strains can be significantl
Jan 1, 1969
-
Experiments With An Underground AugerBy J. P. Newell, R. W. Storey
AUGER mining is a form of continuous mining in that it completely replaces with a one-cycle operation the older conventional cut, drill, shoot, and load method of mining. Relatively new, having been u
Jan 1, 1952
-
Reservoir Engineering-General - Liquid-Density Correlation of Hydrocarbon SystemsBy A. Madrazo
The Standing-Katz method for predicting liquid densities of reservoir fluids has been tested using experimental data of 154 bottom-hole or recombined reservoir fluid samples. New pressure- and tempera
-
Institute of Metals Division - Anisotropy of the Surface Diffusion Coefficient for CopperBy Jei Y. Choi, P. G. Shewmon
Using a scratch smoothing technique, the magnitude and the ratio of the surface diffusion coefficients (D,) in two orthogonal directions have been measured on copper for over 100 different surface or
Jan 1, 1963
-
Natural Gas Technology - Application of Real Gas Flow Theory to Well Testing and Deliverability ForecastingBy R. Al-Hussainy, H. J. Ramey
Previous gas well test analyses have been based mainly upon linearizations of ideal gas flow results, although a method for drawdown analysis based upon real gas flow results has been proposed. Linear
Jan 1, 1967
-
Kaiser Cement Modernizes With World's Largest Rod-Ball MillBy Arnold H. Kackman
At the Kaiser Cement and Gypsum plant near San Jose, Calif., one rod-ball mill has taken over the entire raw grinding function for the largest single cement operation in the West. Installed as part of
Jan 7, 1967
-
Marshal Foch Made Honorary Member of Engineering SocietiesMARSHAL Foch has been made an honorary member of the four national American societies of civil, mining and metallurgical, mechanical, and electrical engineers. The governing bodies of these societies,
Jan 1, 1922
-
ConstitutionNAME AND OBJECT. SEC. 1. This Institute is incorporated under the Membership Corporation Law of the State of New York ; its corporate name is AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF MINING ENGINEERS; and its objects a
Jan 1, 1910
-
Reservoir Engineering–General - The Prediction of Gas-Well Performance Including the Effect of Non-Darcy FlowBy O. G. Kiel, G. W. Swift
The concept of "a continuous succession of steady-states", which has been applied successfully by Aromfsky and Jenkins to obtain a solution for the nonlinear partial differential equation describing t
-
Part XII – December 1969 – Papers - Current Basic Problems in Electromigration in MetalsBy H. B. Huntington
Some of the basic problems in understanding elec-tromigration in metals are discussed, along with the attempts that are being made to handle them. One such problem is the effect of the electrostatic f
Jan 1, 1970
-
Institute of Metals Division - Model for Dendrite Growth Form in Metals and AlloysBy S. W. Kessler, R. B. Pond
Metal specimens were solidified through a measured thermal gradient so a free surface and the liquid-solid interface could be examined. A line structure was observed on the surface and a hexagonal str
Jan 1, 1952
-
Preparation of Industrial Minerals - Flotation of Kaolinite for Removal of Quartz (Mining Tech., Jan. 1945, T.P. 1753)By Herbert H. Kellogg
Deposits of high-silica kaolinite clays occur at many places in central Pennsylvania. These white clays were formed apparently by weathering of argillaceous quartzite and limestone. Their geology, dis
Jan 1, 1948