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Institute of Metals Division - Environmental Influences on the Fatigue of Molybdenum (TN)By James A. Roberson
THE mechanical behavior of molybdenum has become a matter of considerable interest in recent years because it has a reasonably high strength at high temperatures. Various aspects of its fatigue behavi
Jan 1, 1965
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Institute of Metals Division - Discussion: Ductile Fracture of AluminumBy R. C. Gifkins
R. C. Gifkins (CSIRO)—In this paper evidence is put forward to support the idea of grain boundary shearing in aluminum at 4.2°K and the phenomenon is explained in terms of a low-temperature "equicohes
Jan 1, 1965
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Manufacturers NewsThe Goodman Mfg. Co., Chicago, builders of underground electric mining machinery, celebrated its 50th Anniversary on April 23rd. The company has a complete line of cutting machines, loaders, conveyors
Jan 5, 1950
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PART VI - Communications - Discussion on “The Preparation of Titanium for Transmission Electron Microscopy”By J. C. Scully
In June, 1965, Sanderson and scully5 reported at the Conference on Environment Sensitive Mechanical Properties of Materials at the Research Institute for Advanced Studies at Baltimore that thin foils
Jan 1, 1968
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Scranton Paper - Indicative PlantsBy R. W. Raymond
In a paper on the Divining-Rod (Transactions, xi., 411), presented at the Boston meting, in February, 1883,I suggested, among other signs of which the skilled prospector might consciously or unconscio
Jan 1, 1887
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A. I. M. E. Technical Publications and Preprints 1932All the TECHNICAL PUBLICATIONS and PREPRINTS published in 1932 are available at Institute headquarters. They are also on file in public,, university and technical libraries and, when so indicated in t
Jan 1, 1932
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Current Problems In Beneficiation Of Kaolin ClayBy Raymond H. Young, Paul Sennett
INTRODUCTION Kaolin clay, consisting largely of the mineral kaolinite, is widely used as a white pigment. In the United States, for instance, pigment kaolin production was nearly 6,000,000 tons in
Jan 1, 1979
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Halifax Paper - The Pictou Coal-FieldBy Henry S. Poole
This field is geologically of much interest. It is small, hut with some seams of unusual thickness, the main one being as much as thirty-eight feet thick. The quality of the seams, as also of the asso
Jan 1, 1886
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Canadian Paper - Pyritic Smelting in the Black HillsBy Franklin R. Carpenter
Pyritic smelting, so-called, as practiced in the Black Hills is pyritic smelting only in the sense that Dr. John Percy uses the expression in his " Metallurgy of Silver," where he describes a process
Jan 1, 1901
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Canadian Paper - The Indicator Vein, Ballarat, AustraliaBy T. A. Rickard
In " The Genesis of Certain Auriferous Lodes "* Dr. Don makes a reference to a curious vein-formation known as the "Indicator," which characterizes a portion of the Ballarat mining district,, in Victo
Jan 1, 1901
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Cobalt From Nickeliferous LimonitesBy Paul E. Queneau, H. J. Roorda
Cobalt consumption will increase during the next decade at an average rate at least equal that of nickel. In the past, use of cobalt has at times been curtailed by lack of availability or by high pric
Jan 1, 1971
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Chattanooga Paper - Professional EthicsBy John Hays Hammond
This is an era of "expansion;" and, conformably with the change in commercial conditions, the function of the mining engineer, as well as that of his confréres in many other professions, has also expa
Jan 1, 1909
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New York City Paper - Notes on the Treatment of Nickel-Cobalt Mattes at Mine La MotteBy James W. Neill
The occurrence of minerals of nickel and cobalt at Mine La Motte is probably known to every mineralogist. I will not attempt to describe these minerals, but, before entering on my subject, will briefl
Jan 1, 1885
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San Francisco Paper - Present Conditions in the California Oil-FieldsBy Mark L. Requa
During the past two years California has developed a new and important oil-field: I refer to Midway. This field produced the famous Lake View gusher, which is credited with a total production in exces
Jan 1, 1912
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The Pore Size Of Hydrogen Reduced Tungsten PowderBy Bernard Kopelman, C. C. Gregg
THE reduction of tungstic oxide to tungsten metal powder by hydrogen is a process by which one might expect the resultant metal powder to be porous. In- [ ] deed, sponge iron, prepared by reduction
Jan 1, 1948
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Richmond Paper - Some Principles Controlling the Deposition of OresBy C. R. Van Hise
[Concluding Contribution of Prof. Van Hise to the Discussion of his Paper, and Others on the Same General Subject, presented at the Washington Meeting, February, 1900 (see Ram., xxx., 27, 177, 323, 42
Jan 1, 1902
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Coal Division Arranges Hazleton Meeting, Oct. 14-15By AIME AIME
THE Hazleton district of the Pennsylvania Anthracite Region will be the scene Oct. 14 and 15 of the fall meeting of the Coal Division and the Pennsylvania Anthracite Section. Here, coal mining has bee
Jan 1, 1932
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Lake Superior Underground Iron Mines Gear For FutureBy Philip D. Pearson
Competition is the problem and modernization is the solution in today's underground iron operations on the Lake Superior Range. Profound changes in the iron ore picture during recent years have p
Jan 3, 1962
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Kriging As A Tool To Avoid Overestimation Of Grade In Sulphide OrebodiesBy M. Vallée
This case study compares the actual production figures for the No. I and No. 2 copper orebodies of the Société Miniére Louvem, Val d'Or, Quebec, with the preproduction estimates and a postmortem
Jan 1, 1977
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Metallographic Methods - The Factorial Experiment in Engineering Research (Metals Tech., June 1947, T. P. 2161)By M. K. Barnett
Engineering research consists, broadly speaking, in the investigation of the effect of the variations in a number of factors on some property of a product or characteristic of a process. The unambiguo
Jan 1, 1948