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New York Paper - The Copper-Deposits of Copper Basin, Arizona, and their OriginBy William P. Blake
Copper Basin in Yavapai county, Arizona Territory, about twenty miles southwest of Prescott, is well named. It is a depressed area, and a region of cupriferous impregnation.* The geologic conditions a
Jan 1, 1889
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Petroleum As Fuel Under Boilers And In Furnaces For Heating, Melting, And Heat Treatment Of MetalsBy W. N. Best
(San Francisco Meeting, September, 1915) INTRODUCTION CRUDE oil attracted attention because of its excellence as a fuel for open-hearth furnaces; for making crucible steel and brass; for melting c
Jan 8, 1915
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Papers - Radioactive Methods - Radioactivity Tests of Rock Samples for the Correlation of Sedimentary Horizons (T. P. 1103, with discussion)By M. R. Klepper, H. Landsberg
Many of the sedimentary rocks contain small amounts of radioactive constituents. These vary in quantity in different layers. Some recent deposits show rather high activity as; for example, the deep se
Jan 1, 1940
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General Geology Of Catorce Mining DistrictBy Charles Baker
THE district of Catorce, San Luis Potosi, ranks among the first half-dozen silver-producing camps f Mexico. Mining has been more or less continuous there for 150 years. The large producing mines, Mapu
Jan 9, 1921
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X-ray Metallography - Texture of Metals after Cold Deformation (With Discussion)By Franz Wever
The importance of the Widmanstätten structure to structure theory in metallography has been recognized by many writers.l It is a structure produced by the precipitation of a, new phase from a solid
Jan 1, 1931
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Biographical Notices - D. K. TschernoffDimitri Konstantinovitch Tschernoff, was horn in Petrograd, Russia, on Nov. 1, 1839, and died in Yalta (Crimea) in the south of Russia, on Jan. 2, 1921. He obtained his early education in the Russi
Jan 1, 1922
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Prediction Of Compressive Strength Of Rock From Its Sonic PropertiesBy Leonard E. Wood, Yeghishe M. Avedissian
Knowledge of the basic properties of rocks-strength, structure, and permeability-is prerequisite for the success of foundation work for masonry dams, large bridge piers, and tunneling as well as for e
Jan 1, 1972
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Absorption Of Sulfur From Producer Gas In Open-Hearth FurnacesBy J. H. Nead
The subject of this paper is one to which there are many references in the literature but on which few actual data have been published. Such data are here presented showing the absorption of sulfur fr
Jan 2, 1924
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The Columbia School Of MinesTWO American students entered the École des Mines in 1856, Joseph Lesley of Philadelphia and Thomas Egleston of New York. Lesley remained there only one year, but Egleston completed the whole curricul
Jan 1, 1941
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Florida Paper - The Lixiviation of Silver-Ores by the Russell Process at Aspen, Colorado (see Discussion p. 993)By Willard S. Morse
The purpose of this paper is to record the results obtained in the use of the Russell process at Aspen, Colo., covering a period of fourteen months, from November, 1891, to December, 1892, during whic
Jan 1, 1896
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Air-Float Conveying Of Particulate Bulk SolidsBy C. R. Woodcock, J. S. Mason
In almost any situation where particulate or granular bulk solids have to be conveyed, whether for a distance of a few metres or for many hundreds of metres, a pneumatic conveying system may be consid
Jan 1, 1980
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Oil-Field BrinesBy Chester Washburne
RECENTLY, Messrs. Mills and Wells1 published a thorough chemical study of the waters associated with oil in parts of the Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia region. Many of their conclusions are of
Jan 9, 1920
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Phase Relationships - The Coexistence of Liquid and Vapor Phases at Pressure Above 10,000 PSIBy Donald L. Katz, Michael J. Rzasa
With greater effort being devoted to the discovery of new oil and gas reserves and a consequent increase in bottom hole pressures due to greater drilling depths, the phase relationships of hydrocarbon
Jan 1, 1950
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Papers - - Produciton - Domestic- Oil and Gas Development in LouisianaBy B. C. Craft
Louisiana experienced deeper and increased drilling during 1934, resulting in the discovery of five new fields: Bosco, Acadia and St. Landry Parishes; Lake Hermitage, Plaquemines Parish; Roanoke, Jeff
Jan 1, 1935
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Factors In The Ignition Of Methane And Coal Dust By ExplosivesBy G. St. J. Perrott
ONE of the important hazards in coal mining is the danger of ignition of explosive mixtures of methane and air or coal dust and air, or both, by the explosives used in blasting the coal. It has long b
Jan 10, 1926
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Metal Mining - Physiological Effects of Mine Dusts (with Discussion)By Edgar L. Collis
NO industry or group of industries is more deeply interested in the influence exerted by atmospheric dust than that concerned with the getting of coal and of metalliferous ores. The coal miner in the
Jan 1, 1927
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The New River Coal-Field of West VirginiaBy S. Fisher Morris
THE New River coal-field embraces that portion of the Appalachian coal formation which lies on the waters of the New River, principally in Fayette and Raleigh counties, West Virginia, covering a strip
Jan 1, 1880
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Papers - Well Spacing - Theory of Well Spacing (With Discussion)By W. P. Haseman
The well method of producing oil and gas is universally used in the development and operation of oil and gas properties. It consists essentially in the spacing of a number of wells on a given tract, a
Jan 1, 1930
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Papers - Nonmetallic Minerals - Application of the Wire Saw in Marble Quarrying (With Discussion)By W. M. Weigel
The first successful use of the wire saw in slate quarrying in the United States was late in 1926, at the quarry of the Colonial Slate Co. near Wind Gap, Pa. This installation was sponsored and superv
Jan 1, 1931
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Oil In Southern Tamaulipas, MexicoBy Ezequiel Ordoñez
THE great activity with which the oil resources of the northern Cantons of the State of Veracruz have been developed has largely resulted from the great success obtained by the important explorations
Jan 5, 1918