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Gold Acres, Nevada - The Discovery And Development Of Gold Acres, NevadaBy Michael R. Cartwright
The Gold Acres outcrop was located by Lee Lakin in 1922, according to Mr. H. W. Treweek. There was no activity, however, until 1935, when prospect drifts and pits penetrated the deposit. It was then d
Jan 1, 1985
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Institute of Metals Division - Observations on the Recrystallization of a Silicon-Iron Crystal in a Polygonized MatrixBy H. Hu
Observations were made on the recrystallization of a 70 pct cdd-rolled silicon-iron crystal with an initial orientation of (113) [332]. Its polygonization and recrystallization characteristics were st
Jan 1, 1960
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Iron Ore And The Steel IndustryBy Charles McElroy White
IT is indeed an honor to have been asked to participate in the program which celebrates the seventy-fifth birthday of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers. This great organiza
Jan 1, 1947
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Index (461ebee9-ec58-4ac8-ac4b-f1eee4623a81)Jan 1, 1943
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Calcite Removal From Carbonated Water - Uranium In Situ Leaching SystemA method has been developed to remove calcite from the leaching circuit in the uranium in situ leaching system. The process involves injecting the leachate and a pH control agent tangentially into an
Jan 1, 1985
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Richmond Paper - Some Recently Exploited Deposits of Wolframite in the Black Hills of South Dakota (Discussion, 1024)By J. D. Irving
In the summer of 1899 there appeared in the Black Hills Mining Review† a short note announcing the discovery of certain deposits of wolframite in the vicinity of Lead City and Yellow creek, Lawrence c
Jan 1, 1902
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The Design And Application Of A Centrifugal Slurry PumpBy Jon E. Fatzinger
The design of a centrifugal slurry pump is approached as a compromise between efficiency and wear life of the wetted parts. This compromise is effected by the choice of proper materials of constructio
Jan 1, 1978
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Paper - Gravity Methods - Calculation in the Interpretation of Observations with the Eötvös Torsion BalanceBy Donald C. Barton
Success in the use of the Eötvös torsion balance method of mapping geologic structure depends largely on the accuracy in the interpretation of the observed results. Skill in that interpretation depend
Jan 1, 1929
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Mining Possibilities of the ArgentineBy Chester B. White
ARGENTINA is a country that has never been properly prospected. This is my settled conclusion after reporting on mines in this country ever since 1914, crossing all the mining provinces from Chubut, i
Jan 1, 1937
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Montreal (Annual) Paper - The Cause of FaultingBy John A. Church
In a recent paper read before the Institute it was said of faults that "the sensible expression of the fracture is an earthquake." This notion, which has been expressed before, though usually as a the
Jan 1, 1893
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Statistical Interpretation Techniques in Geochemical ExplorationBy Arthur W. Rose
Statistical techniques are being widely used in geochemical exploration to answer questions involving sample spacing, analytical and sampling errors, thresholds, data smoothing, and optimum combinatio
Jan 1, 1973
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Baltimore Paper - The Magnetic Iron-Ores of Ashe County. N.C.By H. B. C. Nitze
In view of the extensive use of vanning-machines in this country, a brief comparison of the results obtained by the plain belt generally employed, and the corrugated belt which was introduced a few ye
Jan 1, 1893
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Alabama Coal and IronBy Richard P. Rothwell
A REFERENCE to the geological map of Alabama shows the coal- measures of that State to form three distinct fields. The Coosu, or most easterly, contains about one hundred square miles ; the Cahaba, or
Jan 1, 1874
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Steep Pitch Mining of Thick Coal VeinsBy W. G. Whildin
This paper will be confined to a discussion of the methods in use in the property of the Lehigh Coal and Navigation Co. in the Panther Creek valley.
Jan 1, 1915
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The Boulder Batholith Of Montana 1By Paul Billingsley
THE term Boulder batholith was first applied in 1897 by W. H. Weed'2 to the extensive mass of granite in western Montana within whose borders occur the ore, deposits of Butte. In a general, way t
Jan 1, 1915
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Richmond Paper - The Character and Genesis of Certain Contact-Deposits (Discussion, 284, 936)By Waldemar Lindgren
I. Character of the Deposits, 226: Principal Features, 226 (Form, 227; Posi tion, 227 ; Constituent Minerals, 227 ; Exceptions, 228) ; Literature, 228 ; Geo graphic Distribution, 230 ; (Californ
Jan 1, 1902
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Application And Economics Industrial MineralsBy Sheldon P. Wimpfen, Nelson Severinghaus
13.2-1. Introduction. Man's first association with industrial minerals came at the dawn of history when a remote ancestor first put a few rocks together to protect a fire or selected colored clay
Jan 1, 1968
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Audible Warning Signals in Underground Coal MinesBy L. W. Saperstein, W. W. Kaufman
Stimulated by the hearing protection clauses in the 1969 Coal Mine Health and Safety Law, attempts were made to determine what safety hazards, in terms of warning signal discrimination, are attendant
Jan 1, 1976
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Selenium And TelluriumBy William E. Milligan
SELENIUM and tellurium occupy adjacent positions in the odd division of group VI of the periodic table immediately below sulfur, with atomic numbers 34 and 52 and with atomic weights of 78.96 and 127.
Jan 1, 1953
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Structural Geology (0b9c551c-2f95-480e-9b07-ab39fd08d4d0)By C Gunther
Ore deposits are commonly divided into two classes, syngenetic and epigenetic, according to whether the ore was deposited together with the enclosing rock or was introduced after its deposition or sol
Jan 1, 1932