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Papers - Production Engineering - Spacing of Oil WellsBy Lyndon L. Foley
The proper spacing of oil wells is a problem of vital importance to the oil industry. Conservation demands a maximum recovery, while economic considerations attach primary importance to profitable ext
Jan 1, 1938
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Production - Domestic - Petroleum Developments in Southern Louisiana in 1939By J. Brian Eby
The Gulf Coast area of Louisiana enjoyed a particularly active and profitable year in 1939. Fifteen new producing structures were located and approximately sixty new producing sand horizons in old fie
Jan 1, 1940
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Hardinge Mills Vs. Chilean Mills. (b155f40a-024f-4f0e-952f-d65dc866a2f6)By Robert Franke
(Butte Meeting, August, 1913.) IN view of the prominence which the conical mill has attained in the fine-crushing field .within the few years since its introduction, the following comparison with its
Jan 7, 1913
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Grain-Size Inheritance In Iron And Carbon Steel (6de8eda1-260e-4060-bc1c-6bda44682af3)ZAY JEFFRIES (written discussion*).-I have read with much interest Mr. Ruder's discussion of Professor Howe's paper, "The Supposed Reversal of Inheritance of Ferrite Grain Size from that of
Jan 3, 1918
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Rotary Calciners For GypsumBy Frank Wilder
THE most important process in a gypsum mill is calcining the crude mineral. There seems, however, to be little progress or change in calcining methods. This would not be surprising if the industry was
Jan 2, 1925
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The Manufacture of Iron and Steel RailsBy John B. Pearse
IN order to get an idea as to the strength of steel rails, it will be well to review the tests to which iron rails have been subjected. In England, Mr. Ashcroft found that the best 80 pound rails brok
Jan 1, 1873
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New York Paper - The Mining and Reduction of Quicksilver Ore at the Oceanic Mine, Cambria, Cal. (with Discussion)By C. A. Heberlein
The present war in Europe seems to have stimulated the demand for quicksilver. In July last, the price ranged around $35 per flask of 75 Ib., while to-day it seems to fluctuate between $47.50 and $50.
Jan 1, 1915
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in West Virginia during 1944By David B. Reger
Widespread wildcatting for new supplies of natural gas and the beginning of importation from the southwest characterized the petroleum industry of West Virginia during 1944. Within the state, drilling
Jan 1, 1945
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Prospecting And Estimating OreONE of the fundamental reasons for the extreme rapidity with which the Porphyries developed after the trail had been blazed at Bingham was the amenability of the deposits to prospecting and proving of
Jan 1, 1933
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Discussions - Of Mr. Campbell's Paper on The Commercial Value of Coal-Mine Sampling (see p. 341)Mr. A. Bement, Chicago, Ill. (communication to the Secretary*) :—Mr. Campbell, in proposing his method of sampling coal-seams, has rendered an important service in insisting on the presentation of an
Jan 1, 1906
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New York City Paper - Tin-Ore Veins in the Black Hills of DakotaBy William F. Blake
In September I contributed an article upon Columbite in the Black Hills of Dakota to the American Journal of Science. I had not at that time seen the paper by Professor Charles A. Schaeffer, of Cornel
Jan 1, 1885
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Variation of Internal Friction with Grain SizeBy Clarence Zener
THEORETICAL considerations by one of the authors have led1 to the prediction that the dynamic internal friction of annealed metals has a broad maximum at a certain grain size. This prediction they hav
Jan 1, 1940
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Discussions - Of Mr. Keyes's Paper on Genesis of the Lake Valley, New Mexico, Silver-Dc- posits (see Trans., xxxix., 139)William M. Courtis, Detroit, Mich. (communication to the Secretary*):—I have a few items to add to the history of the Lake Valley mines. In December, 1879, I was sent to the Bassic mine of Colorado
Jan 1, 1910
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Growing Import of State Geological SurveysBy George C. Branner
STATE geological surveys have had an interesting development in this country. They first appeared more than a hundred years ago. The fact that they have persisted and are now an important part of most
Jan 1, 1941
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Fine Grind - Scholarship Incentive And Undergraduate EnrollmentBy M. C. Fuerstenau
Enrollment in the mineral engineering departments at many of our universities has decreased substantially over the past few years, a fact that is due to a number of reasons. Some of the more obvious r
Jan 1, 1970
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New York Paper - The Copper-Deposits of the Kaibab Plateau, Arizona (Discussion, p. 989)By E. P. Jennings
These unique copper-deposits occur on the top of the Kaibab Plateau, in Cocouino county, Arizona, and extend from the northern edge of the Grand Cañon of the Colorado river to near the Utah State line
Jan 1, 1904
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Lake Champlain (Plattsburgh) Paper - Note on the Magnetic Separation of Iron-Ore at the Sanford 0re-Bed. Moriah, Essex County. N. Y., in 1852By William P. Blake
In my short " Contribution to the Early History of the Industry of Phosphate of Lime in the United States,"* mention is made of the erection by Dr. Emmons and myself of a magnetic machine for the remo
Jan 1, 1893
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Lake Superior Paper - A Combination Retort and Reverberatory FurnaceBy Courtenay DeKalb
The accompanying illustrations, Figs. 1 to 6, from plans drawn by Mr. T. L. Knapp, a student in the Missouri School of Mines, show a type of furnace designed by the writer, which possesses some peculi
Jan 1, 1898
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Papers - - Produciton - Domestic- Petroleum in the Central Texas Area during 1934By Paul R. Martin, R. B. Kelly
The area comprising what is geographically termed "Central Texas" was somewhat less active in 1934 than in 1933. The year saw the completion of 182 dry holes and only 74 producing wells. Bexar, Willia
Jan 1, 1935
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Papers - Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas in Michigan during 1937By Theron Wasson
Michigan produced 16,637,000 bbl. in 1937. This makes it a record year in the history of Michigan's oil industry. During the year 953 wells were completed; 779 within the limits of established fi
Jan 1, 1938