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Supergene Nickel DepositsBy Benj. N. Webber
There is a broad analogy between super gene nickel deposits and super gene copper deposits of the porphyry type. Some of the nomenclature of supergene copper may he applied to super gene nickel deposi
Jan 1, 1973
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Peru: A Special ReportBy Duane H. Haley
The century we live in has been an eventful time for the Third World, particularly the country of Peru. Although it will take one or two generations more to see its end and fully evaluate its scope, i
Jan 1, 1974
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New York Paper - Mineral Resources of British IndiaBy Sarat C. Rubra
Geographically, British India includes India or Hindustan proper, Burma, and a part of Beluchistan. In ancient times India occupied a very important position anlong the producers of minerals and me
Jan 1, 1904
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III. Hexagonal SystemBy William E. Ford, Edward Salisbury Dana
A. Hexagonal Division 1. Normal Class (13) Beryl Type 2. Hemimorphic Class (14) Zincite Type 3. Pyramidal Class (15) Apatite Type 4. Pyramidal-Hemimorphic Class (16) Nephelite Type 5. Trapezohedr
Jan 1, 1922
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Seventy-Five Years Of Progress In Smelting And Leaching Of OresBy Frederick Laist
IN the course of the past 75 years the treatment of copper ores has undergone the most profound changes. To a lesser degree, this is true of all the nonferrous metals, but the rapid increase in the de
Jan 1, 1947
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Anson Greene PhelpsBy Robert Glass Cleland
THE BEGINNING of a large enterprise is often as in- significant as a lump of leaven hidden in a bowl of meal or a handful of mustard seed that the wind blows across a field. In 1950 the company known
Jan 1, 1952
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Geophysics and Geochemistry - Model Studies of an Apparatus for Electromagnetic ProspectingBy H. E. Swanson
A description of the field apparatus has been published by D. G. Brubaker. Data from laboratory model studies of the in-line and broadside methods of operation are detailed. The conductor models inc
Jan 1, 1961
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Part X - The 1967 Howe Memorial Lecture – Iron and Steel Division - Influence of Coarsening on Dendrite Arm Spacing of Aluminum-Copper AlloysBy J. C. Coughlin, M. C. Flemings, T. Z. Kattamis
Experiments on Al-4.5 pct Cu alloy shou the dendrite arnz spacing increases with time during isothermal holding in the liquid-solid region. This coarsening of the dendrite structure is then shown to
Jan 1, 1968
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Salt Lake Paper - Experimental Leaching at AnacondaBy Frederick Laist, Howard Aldrich
The object of the construction and operation of the 80-ton leaching plant was to test out the leaching of sand tailings on a large scale and, if possible, determine a definite method of operation, and
Jan 1, 1915
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Boston Paper - Some Recent Improvements in Open-Hearth Steel PracticeBy Alfred E. Hunt
The late Alexander Holley said, on returning from a careful study of the relative merits of the Bessemer and the open-hearth processes, as shown in the best European practice, that, in this country, t
Jan 1, 1888
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Amenia Paper - Copper Mining on Lake SuperiorBy Thomas Egleston
The copper-bearing rocks of Lake Superior are composed of a series of metamorphic rocks, comprised under the names of amygdaloid and conglomerate, in which the copper and silver found with them are ps
Jan 1, 1879
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Magnesium and Magnesium Alloys - Solubility of Iron in Liquid Magnesium (Metals Tech., Jan. 1948, TP 2309)By D. W. Mitchell
While pure magnesium does not corrode rapidly the presence of even very small quantities of certain other metals accelerates corrosion remarkably. Because magnesium is such an electropositive metal (E
Jan 1, 1949
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Mining and Milling Practice at Santa GertrudisBy Hugh Rose
THE properties of the company lie within the Pachuca district, State of Hidalgo, Mexico, connected by three railway lines with Mexico City, 55 miles southwest, and by two lines with Vera Cruz, 250 mil
Jan 8, 1916
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New York Paper - The Nature of Martensite (with Discussion)By Edgar C. Bain
In studying the structural characteristics of martensite it is desirable that a clear conception of the material from which martensite is produced should first be obtained. Any theory of its formation
Jan 1, 1924
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New York Paper - The Nature of Martensite (with Discussion)By Edgar C. Bain
In studying the structural characteristics of martensite it is desirable that a clear conception of the material from which martensite is produced should first be obtained. Any theory of its formation
Jan 1, 1924
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Minerals Beneficiation - The Behavior of Mesabi Iron and Silicate Minerals in 20-Kilogauss Magnetic FieldsBy J. E. Lawver, J. L. Wright, H. R. Kokat
Mesabi semitaconite and oxidized taconite ores that cannot be concentrated by froth flotation can be rendered amenable to flotation through partial concentration in a high-in tensity wet magnetic sepa
Jan 1, 1969
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Institute of Metals - Hardness of Copper, and Meyer’s Analysis (with Discussion)By T. R. Schermerhorn, Samuel L. Hoyt
The hardness of annealed copper has been given in the literature and is easily obtained by any of the standard methods of hardness testing. It is not our intention to correct published values or to ad
Jan 1, 1926
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Principles of Sulfide Mineral FlotationBy John Rogers
The goal of a detailed quantitative understanding of the variables insulfide flotation in terms of established, or new, scientific principles is still distant, although there has been a good beginning
Jan 1, 1962
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Developments in the Production of Arsenic at AnacondaBy E. A. Barnard
ARSENIC is a very old substance. The ancients speak of it in their writings, and its use has developed very little until recent years. The ancients used it in making pigments, in medicine, and for poi
Jan 8, 1923
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Rock Mechanics - Behavior of Rock During BlastingBy R. T. Keyes, R. B. Clay, L. L. Udy, V. O. Cook, M. A. Cook
Based on compressibility and stress wave velocity in rock, initial explosive loading conditions, the thermochemistry of the explosive and reasonable description of the pressure-distance relations behi
Jan 1, 1967