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New York Paper - Industry, Democracy and Education (with Discussion)By C. V. Corless
We are living at a period of the world's history in which social phenomena are on so vast a scale, are of so profoundly soul-searching a nature, and are occurring in such rapid succession in the
Jan 1, 1920
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Reservoir Engineering – Laboratory Research - The Determination of Partial Pressure Maintenance Performance by Laboratory Flow TestsBy T. M. Geffen, F. F. Craig
Laboratory model flow tests have been made to simulate field conditions of partial pressure rnaintenance by dispersed gas drive on rocks having sandstone-type porosity. In this production method there
Jan 1, 1957
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Solubility Of Carbon In Molten CopperBy Carl F. Floe, Michael B. Bever
THE possibility that carbon may be soluble in copper to a limited extent has been recognized for over a century. The quantitative investigation of this problem, however, requires more sensitive techni
Jan 1, 1945
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Production Engineering - Determination of Fluid Level in Oil Wells by the Pressure-wave Echo Method (With Discussion)By C. P. Walker
Determining the distance to remote objects by observing the time required for sound to traverse the intervening space is an old practice. Attempts have been made to use this method for determining the
Jan 1, 1937
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Papers - Properties of Metals - Working Properties of TantalumBy M. M. Austin
Pure metallic tantalum, from a practical standpoint, is one of the newer developments in the metal field. Although it was used as filament in incandescent lamps in 1906, only within the last, five yea
Jan 1, 1930
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TripoliBy Henry P. Ehrlinger, James C. Bradbury
Tripoli is a naturally occurring, very finely divided form of silica found chiefly in some midwestern and southeastern states and used commercially as fillers and abrasives. Definitions Tripoli is
Jan 1, 1975
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Chicago Paper - Petroliferous Provinces (with Discussion)By E. G. Woodruff
The earlier struggles in petroleum geology were directed to solving the Qrigin and method of accumulation of petroleum. We are now fairly well agreed on those subjects. Most of us think that the great
Jan 1, 1921
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Prospecting The Piceance Creek Basin For Oil ShaleBy Tell Ertl
THE Piceance Creek Basin in northwestern Colorado is believed to contain the richest large deposit of oil shale in North America. The major portion, about 1650 sq miles, is bounded by the White River
Jan 1, 1952
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Cincinnati Paper - The Iridium IndustryBy W. L. Dudley
It is my desire to call attention to a new industry which was started about four years ago, through the discovery by Mr. John Holland, a resident of this city, of the methods employed in working the m
Jan 1, 1884
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Part IV – April 1969 - Communications - Creep of Powder Metallurgy Rhenium at 0.43 to 0.72TmBy Peter L. Raffo, Walter R. Witzke
RHENIUM has a melting point of 5750°F, the second highest value among the metals.1 Its refractory nature should thus make it a useful material at high temperatures. The only available data on the hig
Jan 1, 1970
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Technical Papers - Geophysics - Magnetic Anomaly of Inclined Vein of Infinite Length (Mining Tech., Nov. 1947, TP 2260)By L. Massé, Th. Koulomzine
Note on Haalck's Formula Quantitative interpretation of magnetic anomalies is admittedly a difficult process. Few authors have attempted a general approach to this problem. A number of publica
Jan 1, 1949
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Flotation Of PyriteBy Walter Morley
This paper is a record of the first of a series of tests on sulfide minerals to be made by the metallurgical department f the University of California. The purpose of the tests here recorded is to det
Jan 7, 1921
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Research In Rotary-Percussive DrillingBy E. P. Pfleider, W. D. Lacabanne
ROTARY-percussive drilling is a new method of drilling hard rock. Designed to give variations in thrust, revolutions per minute, and torque ranges, these drills combine the high efficiency of the rota
Jan 7, 1957
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New York September, 1890 Paper - The Ball-Norton Electro-Magnetic SeparatorBy C. M. Ball
The magnetic concentration of iron-ores has been so often and so widely studied and discussed among the members of the Institute that any remarks concerning its general importance, from an economic st
Jan 1, 1891
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Effect Of Cold Rolling Slid Heat Treatment On Physical Properties Of Britannia MetalBy B. Egeberg
BRITANNIA metal is a white alloy consisting primarily of tin and antimony, the tin greatly predominating. The alloy usually contains a small amount of copper and occasionally very small amounts of one
Jan 1, 1928
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Washington Paper - Geological Relations of the Iron-Ores in the Cartersville District, GeorgiaBy C. Willard Hayes
One of the most productive iron-ore districts of the southern Appalachians lies in the vicinity of Cartersville, in northwestern Georgia, where the ore-deposits are so directly related to the stratigr
Jan 1, 1901
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Institute of Metals Division - Infiltration of TiC SkeletonsBy Herman Blumenthal, Ronald Silverman
lnfiltrability of a porous Tic compact, produced by powder metallurgy technique, depends on the capillarity of the compact and the surface condition and nature of the individual particles. Capillary f
Jan 1, 1957
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Subsurface Dip and Strike Determined by New Polar Core OrientationBy E. Ray Webb
A interest to geologists and to mining and petroleum engineers is a laboratory method for determining the dip and strike of sub- surface structures, as well as the direction of fault planes traversing
Jan 1, 1940
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Union Carbide's Twin-Pit Vanadium Venture At Wilson SpringsBy I. R. Taylor
Union Carbide has recently developed two open- pit vanadium mines in the Wilson Srpings area of central Arkansas about five miles southeast of Hot Springs. The ores from these mines, together with tho
Jan 4, 1969
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Materials for Nuclear PowerBy Stanley B. Roboff
Throughout the world nuclear power re- actors are being designed and constructed as the energy source for stationary power plants. They are built to power submarines, surface ships, and long-range air
Sep 1, 1956