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Cleaning - Control of the Quality of Shipped CoalBy R. G. Baughman
With the constantly increasing sales competition, coal to be sold today must meet the test of quality in every respect. The producers must be able to make all marketable sizes that will meet such gene
Jan 1, 1931
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Organization for Safety in the Portland Cement AssociationBy A. J. R. Curtis
THE Portland Cement Association was organized more than a third of a century ago by a group of cement manufacturers, to do cooperatively the educational and research work needed to ensure proper use o
Jan 1, 1937
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Comparison Of Branch Raise And Combined Shrinkage And Caving MethodsBy Charles Mitke
EXCLUDING top-slicing, and sublevel caving, large production caving methods may be divided into two general classes, the branch raise, or undercut caving method, and the combined shrinkage and caving
Jan 1, 1928
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The Pittsburgh Coal Bed Of OhioBy J. A. Bownocker
THE Pittsburgh is one of the most important coal beds of Ohio. It was the last of the great coal beds to be worked extensively in that State, has the largest area of virgin coal, and will in all proba
Jan 10, 1926
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Pittsburgh Parper - On an Apparatus for Testing the Resistance of Metals to Repeated ShocksBy William Kent
More than twelve years were spent by Wöhler at the instance of the Prussian Government in experimenting upon the resistance of iron and steel to repeated stresses. The results of his experiments are e
Jan 1, 1880
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II. Specific Gravity, or Relative DensityBy William E. Ford, Edward Salisbury Dana
296. Definition of Specific Gravity. - The specific gravity of a mineral is the ratio of its density * to that of water at 4' C. (39'2' F.). This relative density may be learned in any
Jan 1, 1922
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Anthracite Turns to Mechanization and Pillar RecoveryBy H. Merton Ruth
THE northern anthracite fields, although facing the same economic problems as the southern fields, are confronted with the additional problem of fast dwindling reserves of anthracite which can be conv
Jan 7, 1950
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San Francisco Paper - Deposition of Copper Carbonate from Mine WaterBy P. D. Wilson
The genesis of some orebodies has been explained by the mingling and chemical interaction of water solutions of different compositions and the consequent precipitation of the mineral load of one or bo
Jan 1, 1923
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Part XII – December 1968 – Communications - Diffusion Bonding of Whisker-Reinforced AluminumBy M. J. Salkind
In order for fiber composite materials to find extensive use in structures, it is necessary to develop techniques for joining these materials. Riveting and adhesive bonding are two possible techniques
Jan 1, 1969
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Drainage Behavior And Water Retention Properties Of Fine CoalBy D. W. Gillmore, C. C. Wright
DEWATERING is a major problem in the preparation and utilization of fine-sized coals now being recovered in increasing amounts from colliery effluents, refuse banks, and silt ponds. Of the various met
Jan 1, 1952
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Arizona Meeting, September 18 To 25, 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 tim
Jan 9, 1916
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Mining and Milling of Lithium Pegmatite At Kings Mountain, N. C.By D. L. Rainey, E. R. Goter, W. R. Hudspeth
THE area in which spodumene-bearing pegmatites occur extends from Gaffney, S. C., in a northerly direction to Lincolnton, N. C., a distance of about 16 miles. The zone averages 2 miles in width. I
Jan 9, 1953
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The Microstructure Of AluminumBy K. L. Meissner
IT is well known that the so-called pure aluminum contains noticeable amounts of impurities, chiefly iron and silicon, and many investigators have studied the forms in which these impurities exist. Ha
Jan 1, 1926
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Minerals Beneficiation - The Statistical Theory of Primary Breakage Distributions for Brittle MaterialsBy R. R. Kimpel, L. G. Austin
An equation is derived describing fragment size for single fracture of brittle solids. It contains the equations of earlier workers as special or approximate cases and, in addition, is capable of desc
Jan 1, 1965
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StrontiumBy Robert B. Fulton
Commercially, celestite (SrSO,) is the only significant strontium mineral. Among other strontium-bearing minerals, only strontianite (SrCO,) occurs commonly; however, it is not an item of commerce.
Jan 1, 1975
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The Possible Occurrence of Oil and Gas Fields in WashingtonBy Charles Weaver
DURING the past few years there has been considerable activity in prospecting for oil and gas in several parts of western Washington. From time to time seepages of oil or emanations of gas have been r
Jan 7, 1915
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News From Members At The Front (bdc04a99-7132-4d5b-b93c-bb8fdd162bab)K. Baumgarten has returned from active service in France. He reports that he saw C. W. Campbell, formerly with the 2d Engineers on the Chateau Thierry front, and believes that the latter returned to t
Jan 10, 1918
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Relation of Anti-Trust Legislation to Conservation of Mineral ResourcesBy Cornelius Kelley
VOLUMES have been written about the organizing genius of American industrialists. American methods of production are being studied by the manufacturers of other nations to ascertain the prac-ticabilit
Jan 8, 1928
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Employment Of Mine LaborBy Herbert Wilson
THIS topic was discussed at the meeting in St. Louis in September, 1917, and at the meeting in New York in February last, but in the interval the war has accentuated in measurable degree the necessity
Jan 1, 1919
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Industrial Minerals - Commercial Synthesis of Star Sapphires and Star RubiesBy Clifford Frondel
THE aluminum oxide known as corundum has several varieties that have been used as gem materials since ancient times. These include the red variety called ruby, the blue variety sapphire, and the aster
Jan 1, 1955