Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Personal (5b83a601-617e-4d19-aaf2-3414c195bebb)(Members are urged to send in for this column any notes of interest concerning themselves or their fellow-members.) Members and guests who registered at Institute headquarters during the period Mar.
Jan 5, 1915
-
Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in Montana during 1938By Eugene S. Perry
The most notable development in oil and gas operations in Montana during 1938 were extensions to the Kevin-Sunburst and Cut Bank fields. No new fields were discovered, although about 20 widely scatter
Jan 1, 1939
-
Work Measurement and Coal MiningBy Theodore M. Barry
Work measurement is the most common of many titles given to determining the amount of human work required to do any job. A new technique-like most modern management tools-it still needs years of const
Nov 1, 1955
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - The Wolf Safety-LampBy Eugene B. Wilson
The development of coal-mines has kept pace with the facilities at command for ventilating and lighting. In fact, it was formerly • customary to leave unworked those mines, or portions of mines, in wh
Jan 1, 1885
-
Controlled Frequency-The Brushless Electric "Steam Engine"By R. A. Matuszak
Abstract-Throughout the history of power excavating machines, engineers have continuously tried to shape the main drive speed-torque characteristics to provide an optimum performance from each main mo
Jan 2, 1978
-
Controlled Frequency-The Brushless Electric “Steam Engine” (MINING ENGINEERS )By R. A. Matuszak
Throughout the history of power excavating machines, engineers have continuously tried to shape the main drive speed- torque characteristics to provide an optimum from each main motion. Selection of p
Jan 1, 1979
-
Karl S. Twitchell - An Interview By Paul C. MerrittMerritt: Karl, you are a native New Englander, having been born in St. Albans, Vermont, in 1885. How did you decide on becoming a mining engineer? Twitchell: While I was attending St. Albans High S
Jan 9, 1965
-
Playing The Odds In Rock MechanicsBy Gregory B. Baecher
Rock engineering involves uncertainties which are large and difficult to quantify. The traditional design approach to these uncertain- ties has been conservatism, and has been satisfactory to the exte
Jan 1, 1982
-
Dravo Corp. Stakes a Claim in the SO2 Scrubber MarketJust three years after researchers announced its development, Dravo is putting the finishing touches on a new $60-million Thiosorhic lime mine/kiln complex near Maysville, Ky. Electric utilities in
Jan 4, 1977
-
Economics – Mineral Block Evaluation CriteriaBy Roderick K. Davey
Introduction in any business, it is essential that we select those alternatives which are not only technically feasible, but will be the most profitable to the business m terms of corporate objectives
Jan 1, 1979
-
Nepheline Syenite At Blue MountainBy H. R. Deeth
NEPHELINE syenite is a sodium, potassium, aluminum silicate rock occurring in many countries. Large deposits have been investigated in Russia, India, and Norway and in the U. S., where it is known to
Jan 11, 1957
-
Reduction of Oxides in the Graphite Vacuum Fusion Method of Analysis for OxygenBy N. A. Ziegler
THE chief difficulty in determining oxygen in steels is its tendency to form a variety of compounds. Almost every element, found as an ingredient in steels, maybe expected to be present as an oxide. S
Jan 1, 1933
-
Reservoir Engineering–General - An Approximate Method for Determining Areal Sweep Efficiency and Flow Capacity in Formations with Anisotropic PermeabilityBy G. W. Nabor, M. Mortada
The effects of anisotropic or directional permeability on the areal sweep efficiency and the flow capacity are examined. The paper points out the importance of taking directional permeability into con
-
Too Much Wasteful Bulk in the Raw Materials for the Iron Blast FurnaceBy Ralph H. Sweetser
OF SPECIAL importance in the design and construction of an iron blast-furnace plant are tile raw materials to be employed. Obviously the iron must come from some ore of that metal, but the many kinds
Jan 1, 1939
-
New York Paper - The Briquetting of Iron-OresBy N. V. Hansell
The last few years have shown an increasing interest in the subject of beneficiating iron-ores in all iron-producing countries. In the United States, this movement has been slower than in certain part
Jan 1, 1913
-
Applied Geology: The Foundation For Mine Design At Exxon Minerals Company's Crandon DepositBy R. G. Hite, R. G. Rowe
The Crandon deposit, located in northern Wisconsin, is a 65.8 million ton Precambrian volcanogenic massive sulfide deposit which averages 1.4% copper and 5.8% zinc. The deposit is classic in origin, m
Jan 1, 1984
-
Hoover Resigns As Grain ChairmanThe resignation of Herbert Hoover, Director General of Relief in Europe, from his post as Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Food Administration Grain Corporation, in which capacity he had serv
Jan 8, 1919
-
Production - Foreign - Petroleum Developments in Colombia during 1932By O. C. Wheeler
The slackening of activity in oil development in Colombia, which was noted in 1931, continued throughout 1932. In the producing fields output was further curtailed and active operations were substanti
Jan 1, 1933
-
Production - Foreign - Petroleum Developments in Bolivia during 1936By Guillermo Mariaca, Jorge Muñoz Reyer
As far as technology is concerned there has been no development in Bolivia during the year 1936, because the country, just emerging from the war with Paraguay, is only beginning to rebuild its economi
Jan 1, 1937
-
Buffalo Paper - Cement-Rock and Gypsum Deposits in BuffaloBy Julius Pohlman
Considering the truly wonderful natural resources of the United States, and the variety and extent of uses for hydraulic cement at the present day, it seems strange that the manufacture of the artific
Jan 1, 1889