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Technical Papers and Notes - Iron and Steel Division - High-Temperature Deformation of Steels: A Study of Equicohesion, Activation Energies, and Structural ModificationsBy C. Crussard, R. Tamhankar
It is the policy of The Metallurgical Society to provide, in the TRANSACTIONS OF THE METALLURGICAL SOCIETY OF AIME, a prompt and accurate medium for publication of reports of significant new research
Jan 1, 1959
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Minerals Beneficiation - Refinements in Methods of Determining Flotation RatesBy S. M. M. Safvi, A. Jowett
Small-scale continuous flotation tests are described in which the influence of 1) pulp density and 2) feed rate on the rate of flotation are investigated. The results provide further evidence of first
Jan 1, 1961
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Economics of the Mineral Industry - Changing Conditions Compel New Concepts of Mineral EngineeringBy P. T. Allsman
INTRODUCTION The honor of being the recipient of the Mining Society's Daniel C. Jackling Award for 1966 imposes on me the responsibility to search for the subject that I would be best qualifie
Jan 1, 1967
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Coal - Coal Strip Mining-Is It Reaching a Peak?By Hubert E. Risser
Although, for about a half-century the percentage of coal production provided through strip mining has steadily increased, recent trends indicate that a peak in percentage (not tonnage) is being appro
Jan 1, 1970
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Magnesium and Magnesium Alloys - A Process of Augmenting Cold-drawability of the Magnesium +1.5 Percent Manganese Alloy (Metals Tech., April 1947, T. P. 2149, with discussion)By Louis A. Carapella, William E. Shaw
Magnesium and its alloys have long been characterized as possessing limited capacity for mechanical forming at atmospheric temperatures prior to rupturing despite their outstanding performances in thi
Jan 1, 1947
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Magnesium and Magnesium Alloys - A Process of Augmenting Cold-drawability of the Magnesium +1.5 Percent Manganese Alloy (Metals Tech., April 1947, T. P. 2149, with discussion)By William E. Shaw, Louis A. Carapella
Magnesium and its alloys have long been characterized as possessing limited capacity for mechanical forming at atmospheric temperatures prior to rupturing despite their outstanding performances in thi
Jan 1, 1947
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Reservoir Engineering - General - Transient Stresses and Displacement Around a Wellbore Due to Fluid Flow in Transversely Isotropic, Porous Media: II. Finite ReservoirsBy K. E. Gray, M. S. Seth
In Part I of this work,1 equations of elasticity were formulated for transversely isotropic, axisymmetric, homogeneous, porous media exhibiting pore fluid pressure. Equations of elasticity and the the
Jan 1, 1969
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Institute of Metals Division - The Effects of Irradiation upon MetalsBy F. Seitz
STAFF: Editor, Gerhard Derge Carnegie Institute of Technology Schenley Park Pittsburgh 13, Pa. Editorial Assistant, M. A. Redmerski Managing Editor, James J. Burke THE METALLURGICA
Jan 1, 1960
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Part IX - Papers - Metallothermic Reduction of Oxides in Water-Cooled Copper FurnacesBy Fred H. Perfect
The thermite process, now approximately 80 years old, has heretofore been practiced in ceramic vessels. This paper outlines the successful production of several million pounds of alloy produced in zua
Jan 1, 1968
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Boston Paper - Mining and Storing IceBy William P. Blake
We are so familiar with water in its liquid and its solid form, that we seldom think of it as a mineral, and still less as a mineral product of any considerable industrial importance, though in the fo
Jan 1, 1883
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Industrial Minerals - Chemical and Metallurgical Limestone in Northern and Northeastern States and OntarioBy K. K. Landes
The north central and northeastern states supply over 50 pct of the chemical and metallurgical limestone produced annually in the United States, and Ontario is the leading source of this material in C
Jan 1, 1961
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Division Lectures - The 1961 Extractive Metallurgy Division Lecture - Separation Engineering on the MoonBy A. M. Gaudin
Jan 1, 1962
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Separation of Yttrium and Rare-Earth Nitrates with the Solvent Extraction System-Tri-N-Butylamine-3 Methyl-2-ButanoneBy G. T. Engel, W. G. Gruzensky
Jan 1, 1960
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Further Discussion on Threshold Pressure Phenomena in Porous MediaBy M. R. TECK, N. Rudd, L. K. Thomas, D. L. Katz
The authors are to be congratulated for presenting the first comprehensive paper on the theory and practice of threshold pressure determination in connection with underground gas storage. It is of par
Jan 1, 1969
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Arizona Meeting, September 18 To 26, 1916For the first time in its history the Institute will hold a meeting in the State of Arizona. A few years ago Arizona stood third in the copper-producing districts of the United States. Since that time
Jan 8, 1916
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Mining - Experimental Impact Craters in BasaltBy J. Moore, D. Gault, R. V. Lugn
Impact of small projectiles with velocities between 0.9 and 7.3 km per sec on basalt produce craters chiefly by the ejection of fragments. Weight-size distributions of the ejecta are linear for part o
Jan 1, 1963
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Technical Papers and Notes - Institute of Metals Division - In Sb-Sn SystemBy R. N. Zitter
PRESENT work was done in connection with a program for obtaining a low energy gap semiconductor suitable for photodetection. The inter-metallic compound InSb, which is now being in-
Jan 1, 1959
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Benefication of Adirondack MagnetiteBy R. G. Fleck, W. R. Webb
Iron ore mining in the Adirondack region of northern New York dates back to the Revolutionary War. It is recorded that Benedict Arnold in his campaigns in the Lake Champlain area during the American R
Jan 4, 1950
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New York Paper - Some Factors Affecting the Elimination of Sulfur in the Basic Open-hearth Process (with Discussion)By C. C. Miller, A. R. Belyea, C. H. Herty, E. B. Burkart
The removal of sulfur from steel has been studied by many investigators, but the quantitative relationships between the factors involved have not been determined. This is undoubtedly due to the number
Jan 1, 1925
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Papers - Theoretical - Flow of Heat from an Intrusive Body into Country Rock (T. P. 1677, with discussion)By C. E. Van Orstrand
An intrusive body is a mass of igneous rock that has migrated upward, presumably from great depths. Great variations in form, composition and depth of burial occur. It is not proposed in this paper to
Jan 1, 1946