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Coal - Sampling of Coal for Float-and-sink TestsBy A. L. Bailey, B. A. Landry
All who are even generally aware of the tremendous rate of increase in coal washing operations must realize the growing importance of the float-and-sink test. I believe it is conservative to estimate
Jan 1, 1950
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Institute of Metals Division - Determination of Boundary Stresses during the Compression of Cylindrical Powder Compact (618318ee-0b59-4286-943f-4367f9013db4)By M. E. Shank, J. Wulff
In view of the current interest in magnetic materials having rectangular hysteresis loops, as for example those obtained with the grain oriented 50 nickel 50 iron alloys,t we wish to call attention ag
Jan 1, 1950
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Automatic Compensation For Cold-Junction Temperatures Of Thermocouple PyrometersBy Felix Wunsch
WHILE the effect of the cold-junction temperature has been known by many, its consideration has been ignored in a number of installations, resulting at tunes in a very considerable error. In fact, the
Jan 9, 1919
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Washington Paper - The Outlook for Coal-Mining in AlaskaBy Alfred H. Brooks
Less than a decade ago the consumption of coal in Alaska was practically limited to the salmon canneries and the few ode-mines and settlements along the Pacific coast of the The-itory. The sparse popu
Jan 1, 1906
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Development Of A Dynamic Continuum Description For Cracked RockBy Robert O. Davis, Phillip A. Abbott
The response of geologic materials subject to nuclear weapon effects is of considerable interest in the design of buried protective construction. Recently, more consideration has been given to placing
Jan 1, 1971
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Institute of Metals Division - The Solute Metallic Valence as an Index of Phase Stabilization in Zirconium-Base Alloys (TN)By J. C. Uy, A. A. Burr
IN the primary solid solutions of zirconium-base alloys, there is a striking regularity of the effect of solute valence on the stabilization of the allotropic phases.1 The valences derived by pauli
Jan 1, 1962
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Data Bank for Geologic Field Work (GEOBANK) and ExtensionBy Dan Chun
Abstract-To facilitate the efficient handling of large volumes of information generated by logging exploration drill cores, a computer data bank system (GEOBANK) has been developed to store and retrie
Jan 9, 1978
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Use Of A Conductivity Cell For Flotation Reagent ControlBy J. F. Myers, F. M. Lewis
IN the mining and handling of sulphide ores, some degree of oxidation takes place on the sulphide surfaces, which are exposed to the atmosphere. It is, moreover, well known that the oxidation compound
Jan 1, 1946
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Bucket Wheel Excavator Technology for Mining Lignite in TexasBy Karl J. Benecke
Though the first patent on a bucket wheel excavator (BWE) was granted in 1881 in the US, this technology was developed in Germany to the high standards of today. However, this development was only pos
Jan 8, 1979
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Research and Classification - Need for Coal Research (With Discussion)By H. H. Lowry
Science attracts the attention and interest of an individual or an industry in general only in proportion to the apparent direct application to its immediate welfare or benefit. Engineering accomplish
Jan 1, 1936
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Research and Classification - Need for Coal Research (With Discussion)By H. H. Lowry
Science attracts the attention and interest of an individual or an industry in general only in proportion to the apparent direct application to its immediate welfare or benefit. Engineering accomplish
Jan 1, 1936
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The Reserves of Iron Ore for the United StatesBy J. Birkinbine
Extended discussions, by inviting attention to problems affecting the conservation of natural resources, have encouraged investigations as to their sufficiency, with the general result that the more t
Jan 1, 1915
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Plant For Production Of Magnesium By The Ferrosilicon ProcessBy Andrew Mayer
EARLY in 1942 National Lead Co. was requested by the War Production Board to construct and operate a plant for the Government to produce magnesium by the ferrosilicon process which had been developed
Jan 1, 1944
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The Substitution Of Air For Water In Diamond DrillingBy Ralph Wilcox
THE diamond drilling of certain characters of unstable rock forma-tion, as, for example, the copper-bearing schists of the Miami district in Arizona, is rendered most difficult by what is known as " c
Jan 10, 1913
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Geochemical Prospecting Finds Widespread Application in British ColumbiaBy Robert E. Delavault, Harry V. Warren
IN the worldwide search of buried orebodies and for entirely new areas of mineralization, geo-chemistry is taking on an increasingly important role. Indeed, geochemistry itself is splitting into vario
Jan 10, 1953
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Baltimore Paper - Contribution to the Early History of the Industry of Phosphate of Lime in the United StatesBy William P. Blake
The late Dr. Ebenezer Emmons of Albany, one of the geologists of the Survey of New York and the author of The Taconic System, brought to notice as early as 1838" a peculiar concretionary and lamellar
Jan 1, 1893
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Part IX - Discussion - Discussion of "Measurement of Topological Parameters for Description of Two-Phase Structures with Special Reference to Sintering"By L. K. Borrett ond C. S. Yusi
The authors have made extensive use of a modern field of mathematics, topology, to give a new approach to the study of sintering. They present a topological model for the sinter body and the void spac
Jan 1, 1967
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Discussion - Statistical Interpretation Techniques in Geochemical Exploration – Transactions SME/AIME, Vol. 252, No. 3, September 1972, pp. 233-239 – Rose, Arthur W.By Bjorn Bolviken
Bjorn Bolviken (Geochemist, Geological Survey of Norway, Trondheim, Norway)-Under the heading "Recognition of Anomalies," the author states, "If the frequency distribution is actually log-normal, the
Jan 1, 1974
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Ottawa Paper - The Wear of Rails as Related to their SectionsBy P. H. Dudley
The present paper was suggested by the paper read by Mr. R. W. Hunt at the New York Meeting, in February last, on rail-sections (Trans., xvii., p. 778)) in the discussion of which I brought forward so
Jan 1, 1890
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MSHA’S Use Of Computers For Coal Refuse Disposal PlansBy Alex G. Sciulli
This paper discusses the primary computer programs used by the Mine Safety and Health Administration's Bruceton Safety Technology Center to evaluate coal refuse disposal plans. These programs are
Jan 1, 1983