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Air-gas Lifts - Mechanical Installations for Gas-lift Pumping as Practiced in California Oil Fields (with Discussion)By H. C. Miller
The gas-lift method of flowing oil from wells is the outstanding feature of petroleum technology today. Its forerunner, the air-lift, was used successfully first, in the Baku fields of Russia, in 1899
Jan 1, 1928
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Iron and Steel Division - Sampling Liquid Steel for Oxygen Content: A Further Evaluation of the Bomb TechniqueBy S. Gilbert, G. R. Bailey
A further evaluation of the bomb-sampling method for determining the oxygen content of liquid steel is presented. The results of this study and their close agreement with the results of an earlier eva
Jan 1, 1955
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Labor Issues In The Mineral IndustryBy Andrew Hodge
ISSUES IN MINING LABOR The examination of mining labor issues is often confined to health, and safety. There are other issues, including the present state of mining manpower availability and utili
Jan 1, 1976
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ConstitutionARTICLE I NAME AND OBJECT SEC. I. This Institute is incorporated under the Membership Corporations law of the State of New York; its corporate name is American Institute of Mining and Metallurgi
Jan 1, 1925
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How One Company Appraises Management Development ProgramsBy Carl E. Reistle
ENGINEERS as a group are often criticized because they have been responsible for the development of many technical improvements only to allow the administration of them to pass into the hands of other
Jan 8, 1954
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Washington Paper - Description of a Double Muffle Furnace, Designed for the Reduction of Hydrous Silicates Containing CopperBy B. Silliman
The experiments detailed by Dr. Hunt,* having demonstrated the fact that the copper contained in the "clay ore" of Jones's Mine, was rendered completely soluble in the bath of ferrous chloride, u
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Papers - Production Engineering - A New Method of Constructing Subsurface Models (T.P. 1271)By Kenneth M. Bravinder, Jonathan E. Koogle, Dean H. Sheldon
The solution of subsurface geological problems requires an analysis of vertical and horizontal dimensional relationships. For many, the ability to visualize structures in three dimensions is not easil
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Production Engineering - A New Method of Constructing Subsurface Models (T.P. 1271)By Kenneth M. Bravinder, Jonathan E. Koogle, Dean H. Sheldon
The solution of subsurface geological problems requires an analysis of vertical and horizontal dimensional relationships. For many, the ability to visualize structures in three dimensions is not easil
Jan 1, 1941
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Personal (6474bb33-30bb-4262-ad01-cab4f35b801a)The following is an incomplete list of members and guests who called at Institute headquarters during the period Feb. 10, 1919, to Mar. 10, 1919. R. H. Allport, Cleveland, Ohio. R. R. Landon, Phili
Jan 4, 1919
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Washington D.C. Paper - The Crystalline Rocks of Virginia compared with those of New EnglandBy C. H. Hitchcock
A brief resiclence in Virginia hasenabled me to examine some of its crystalline strata, and a few hints, concerning their correspondence with similar rocks elsewhere, may be of service to those who ar
Jan 1, 1882
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Electrochemical Behavior Of The Lead-Tin Couple In Carbonate SolutionsBy Harold Markus, Arthur H. Grobe, Gerhard Derge
THE high corrosion resistance possessed by tin under most circumstances, combined with its generally satisfactory appearance and useful physical properties, has led to many and varied uses for the met
Jan 1, 1942
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Reservoir Engineering - General - A Comparison of Theoretical Pressure Build-Up Curves with Field...By C. R. McEwen
The displacement equations of Buckley and Lever-ett' have been successfully applied to the prediction of oil recovery in frontal drives for a number of years. Commonly, the capillary pressure ter
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Drilling and Blasting Practice of the United States Potash Company at Carlsbad, New MexicoBy C. A. Pierce
UNDERGROUND operations of the United States Potash Co. at its mine near Carlsbad, N.M., have been continuous since the property was opened about five years ago. Approximately one million tons of potas
Jan 1, 1936
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New York Paper - Determination of Suspensoids by Alternating-current PrecipitatorsBy Philip Drinker, R. M. Thomson
In the mining and metallurgical industries, numerous problems arise requiring determinations of solid and of liquid particles suspended in air. Frequently, these problems are of local interest and inv
Jan 1, 1925
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New Haven Paper - The " All-Fire" Method for the Assay of Gold and Silver in Blister-CopperBy Walter G. Perkins
As this particular product holds a place by itself, it seems desirable to give a paper dealing especially with it as a corollary to my paper entitled " The Litharge Process of Assaying Copper-Bearing
Jan 1, 1903
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Electrochemical Behavior Of The Lead-Tin Couple In Carbonate SolutionsBy Harold Markus, Gerhard Derge, Arthur Grobe
THE high corrosion resistance possessed by tin under most circumstances, combined with its generally satisfactory appearance and useful physical properties, has led to many and varied uses for the met
Jan 1, 1942
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New York Paper - Flameless CombustionBy Carleton Ellis
The problem of the influence of hot surfaces upon gaseous combustion is one which, from a purely scientific standpoint, has engaged, for many years past, the attention of Prof. William A. Bone, of Lee
Jan 1, 1913
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The Effect Of Certain Starches On Quartz And Hematite SuspensionsBy Strathmore R. B. Cooke, Emert W. Lindroos, Norman F. Schulz
DURING the course of an investigation of the effects of various starch products on hematite and quartz in regard to their separation by' flotation, it was found that whereas most starches floccul
Jan 1, 1952
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Structure Of Copper After RollingBy Charles S. Barrett, F. W. Steadman
DEFORMATION bands of surprising regularity are found in large-grained polycrystalline copper after cold-rolling (Fig. I). Individual bands frequently are large enough to permit a determination of thei
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Comminution - Principles of Comminution-Size and Surface Distribution (T. P. 1779, Min. Tech., Nov. 1944, with discussion)By R. T. Hukki, A. M. Gaudin
Previous work on the principles of comminution has shown: (I) that the surface produced is proportional to work input (Rittinger law,1a-3); (2) that there is regularity to the weight distribution of t
Jan 1, 1947