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Barium Minerals (5472759f-8d52-41dd-abb4-b7deb23019e6)By F. J. Williams
BARITE, naturally occurring barium sulphate, is the chief barium mineral that is produced commercially. Barite is also called "barytes," "heavy spar," sometimes "baryta" and, locally in Missouri, "tif
Jan 1, 1949
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Productivity Improvement in Large Stripping MachinesBy Tom Learmont
The emergence of the dragline as the dominant stripping tool is described and reasons for this are noted. Brief comparisons are made with stripping shovels and wheel excavators. Representative output
Jan 1, 1976
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Linear Thermal Expansion and Transformation Phenomena of Some Low-carbon Iron-chromium Alloys (01090a57-0b4f-4550-bf03-57886fde3a8e)By J. B. Austin
IN developing a consistent picture of the thermal expansion of the commercial chromium steels, which cover a range of carbon contents, it is desirable to know the expansion in the limiting case of the
Jan 1, 1935
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Getting Mining Company’s Approach To Heap Leaching At The Mercur MineBy Kendall Y. Keuhey
The Mercur Mine, developed and operated by Getty Mining Company, is designed to process 3,000 tons/day of gold ore from the historic Mercur Hill mining district. The mill process involves crushing, gr
Jan 1, 1984
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Institute of Metals Division - On the Partition of Chromium Between Austenite and Proeutectoid Ferrite (TN)By H. I. Aaronson
THE TTT-curve for the beginning of transformation in hypoeutectoid steels containing appreciable amounts of relatively strong carbide-forming alloying elements often exhibits a "bay" at intermediate t
Jan 1, 1962
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The Method Of Making The Disc Or Plate For Holding Cores Centrally In Gun Moulds At The Top.IF you do not make the disc at the same time as the core and as part of it, it is necessary to make it by itself. This is done by spreading on a board or other flat surface a layer of clay as thick an
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Lead - Blast-furnace Practice at Midvale, UtahBy Galen H. Clevenger
Equipment for treating lead ores was added in 1905 to a copper plant which the United States Smelting Refining and Mining Co. had built in 1902 at Midvale, Utah, about 12 miles to the south of Salt La
Jan 1, 1937
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Silica Sand And PebbleBy T. D. Murphy
This chapter deals with those types of silica raw materials that have been segregated and refined by natural processes into nearly monomineralic deposits and hence, by virtue of their high degree of p
Jan 1, 1960
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Institute of Metals Division - Lead-Uranium SystemBy R. J. Teitel
The Pb-U system has been investigated by X-ray, thermal, and microscopic analyses. Two pyrophoric intermetallic compounds were found; UPb3 and UPb. The crystallographic structure of UPb3 is reported.
Jan 1, 1953
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New York Paper - The Generation of Steam by Waste Heat from FurnacesBy F. Peter
Technical progress takes place in two directions: the improvement of methods, affecting the quality of the product; and increase in the economy of operations, affecting its cost. In the iron-industry,
Jan 1, 1914
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Concentration of the SO2 Content of Dwight-Lloyd Sintering Machine Gas by RecirculationBy W. S. Reid
In March, 1938, E. P. Fleming, metallurgist for the American Smelting and Refining Co. inaugurated an investigation into the possibilities of recirculating the gases from Dwight-Lloyd sintering machin
Jan 1, 1950
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Blasting Research Leads to New Theories and Reductions in Blasting CostsBy B. J. Kochanowsky
To improve blasting methods it is necessary to know how the explosive force acts and how rock resists this force. Because of the tremendous power developed within milliseconds and the great number of
Sep 1, 1955
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Howe Memorial Lecture - Significance of the Simple Steel AnalysisBy Henry D. Hibbard
At the beginning of a Henry M. Howe lecture it seems fitting to refer to Howe's great contributions to steel metallurgy, and particularly to the literature thereof. Most of my predecessors in thi
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Technical Notes - Effect of Composition on the Wire Textures of Copper and Its Solid Solution AlloysBy W. R. Hibbard
It has been proposed1 on the basis of slip and flow that the ideal deformation texture of drawn wire for face-centered cubic metals is a (111) direction parallel to the wire axis. Under these consider
Jan 1, 1950
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Report Of Pyrometer Committee Of National Research CouncilBy George Burgess
THE Pyrometer Committee was. formed Sept. 20, 1918, at the suggestion of Dr. H. M. Howe, Chairman of the Engineering Division of the Research Council, for the purpose of developing a pyrometric method
Jan 9, 1919
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Minerals Beneficiation - Effects of Structure and Unsaturation of Collector on Soap Flotation of Iron OresBy S. R. B. Cooke, H. S. Choi, I. Iwasaki
Oleic acid is the chief ingredient of fatty acids used as collectors in nonsulfide flotation. With a few notable exceptions, the various quantities of saturated and other unsaturated acids comprising
Jan 1, 1960
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Part VIII – August 1968 - Papers - An Electrochemical Investigation of Copper Cementation by IronBy R. S. Rickard, M. C. Fuerstenau
Anodic polarization curves for iron dissolution and cathodic polarization curves for copper deposition and ferric and hydrogen ion reduction were studied. These results were used to predict the rela
Jan 1, 1969
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Industrial Minerals - Deposits of Heavy Minerals on the Brazilian CoastBy Joseph L. Gillson
BRAZIL has had an industry based on ocean beach deposits of heavy minerals containing monazite, zircon, rutile, and ilmenite for well over 40 years, but except at the very earliest period, prior to 19
Jan 1, 1951
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Industrial Minerals - Deposits of Heavy Minerals on the Brazilian CoastBy Joseph L. Gillson
BRAZIL has had an industry based on ocean beach deposits of heavy minerals containing monazite, zircon, rutile, and ilmenite for well over 40 years, but except at the very earliest period, prior to 19
Jan 1, 1951
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Institute of Metals Division - The Growth of Austenite as Related to Prior Structure - DiscussionBy A. E. Nehrenberg
R. A. Schmucker, Jr.—The writer wishes to point out that an acicular growth of austenite, similar to that described in the author's paper, was recently observed in an alloy steel of only 0.06 C c
Jan 1, 1951