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Magnesium - Its Etching And StructureBy H. B. Pulsifer
ABOUT 15 varieties, or modifications, of the best magnesium available were prepared and subjected to etching tests, then examined for microstructure. Of the 30-odd etching reagents that were tried, ne
Jan 1, 1928
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The Basic Oxygen Steelmaking Process - Historical DevelopmentIN the decade beginning 1850, the development by William Kelly in I the U.S.A. and Henry Bessemer in England of the pneumatic method of refining pig iron, known as the Bessemer process, gave the world
Jan 1, 1964
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Selective Media Concentration-A New Tool For The Mining IndustryBy Harry L. McNeill
THE Selective Media Process was developed by the author in a laboratory provided by The Steårns-Roger Manufacturing Co. It is the outcome of an [ ] investigation into the possibilities of coarse ben
Jan 1, 1946
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PART V - Experimental Evidence of Jet Formation During Explosion CladdingBy O. R. Bergmann
Two approaches were taken to obtain direct experimental evidence jar the existence oj a jet in the explosion-cladding pvocess: 1) direct observation of the claddirg jwocess by rtzeans ojf kig-h-speed
Jan 1, 1967
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Papers - Copper and Brass - Alpha-phase Boundary of the Ternary System Copper-silicon-manganese (With Discussion)By Cyril Stanley Smith
Although alloys of copper and silicon were examined several years ago,' and their excellent mechanical properties were shown, it was not until C. B. Jacobs 2 introduced manganese in small quantit
Jan 1, 1930
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Topsoil-Subsoil Requirements to Restore North Dakota Mined Land to Original ProductivityBy F. M. Sandoval, R. E. Ries, J. F. Power
Returning the original soil material to the surface of smoothed mine spoils is a practical means of restoring agricultural productivity. Research has established that high-sodium spoils in North Dakot
Jan 12, 1979
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Reservoir Engineering- Laboratory Research - Imbibition Model Studies on Water-Wet Carbonate RocksBy R. W. Parsons, P. R. Chaney
Oil recovery by the imbibition mechanism can be important in fractured carbonate reservoirs with a bottom water drive. Laboratory experiments were performed on water-wet carbonate rocks to model this
Jan 1, 1967
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Control Of Mountain Bumps In The Pocahontas No. 4 SeamBy John L. Schroder, Woods G. Talman
EXPERIENCE has shown that certain known natural conditions and other indefinite characteristics combine to make a mining area vulnerable to mountain bumps. Some of the known conditions are heavy overb
Jan 8, 1958
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Institute of Metals Division - Mechanism of Plastic Flow in Titanium: Manifestations and Dynamics of Glide (Discussion page 1316)By F. D. Rosi
The slip and twinning behavior in extended titanium crystals were studied in some detail. The formation and appearance of coarse kink bands are discussed. Their crystallographic geometry was determine
Jan 1, 1955
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The Solidification Of Steel IngotsBy B. R. Queneau
Steel has been chosen as the metal whose solidification will be used to tie in the principles discussed in the previous papers. Although steel is the most important [ ] practical example that could
Jan 1, 1951
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Part VIII - Anisotropy of Grain Boundary Mobility in Zone-Refined Aluminum CrystalsBy B. B. Rath, Hsun Hu
Rates of migration of large-angle boundaries have been studied in zone-refined aluminum crystals, defonned 80 pct by rolling in the (110)[112] orientation at -78°C followed by a recovery anneal at 80°
Jan 1, 1967
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Potash As A Byproduct From The Blast FurnaceBy R. J. Wysor
SINCE the outbreak of the European war, few problems of raw-material supply have commanded more nation-wide attention than potash. It is well known that before the war the domestic production of potas
Jan 1, 1917
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Drilling-Equipment, Methods and Materials - Estimation of Formation Pressures from Log-Derived Shale PropertiesBy C. E. Hottman, R. K. Johnson
Fluid pressure within the pore space of shales can be determined by using data obtained from both acoustic and resistivity logs. The method involves establishing relationships between the common logar
Jan 1, 1966
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Sulphur And PyritesBy W. T. Lundy
THE forms in which sulphur is commonly found-native sulphur, sulphides of many metals and sulphates-are widely distributed throughout the world. The two first mentioned are the principal sources of su
Jan 1, 1949
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New York Paper - Intercrystalline Brittleness of lead (with Discussion)By Henry S. Rawdon
The relation between the course, or path, of the fracture of metals and alloys, produced in service or as a result of certain laboratory tests, and the crystalline units of which such materials are co
Jan 1, 1921
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Analysis of Roof Bolting Systems Based on Model StudiesBy Louis A. Panek
Most roof bolts are used in mines with bedded roofs, but it has not been determined to what degree thin-bedded roofs can be reinforced by bolting if there is no thick member in which to anchor the bol
Oct 1, 1955
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Unit Construction Costs From The New Smelter Of The Arizona Copper Co., Ltd.By E. Horton Jones
INTRODUCTION WE have endeavored in the following "sheets" to give the unit construction costs derived from the building of the Arizona Copper Co.'s new smelter, Clifton, Ariz., starting in Febru
Jan 7, 1914
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Correlation Of The Bureau Of Mines-American Gas Association Carbonization Assay Tests With Coal AnalysesBy Leah L. Naugle, H. G. Landau, H. H. Lowry
EVIDENCE has been accumulating in recent years, in part from the work of the Coal Research Laboratory, that coals belong to a family of natural polymers and that even in complex reactions the differen
Jan 1, 1941
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New York September, 1890 Paper - Iron and LaborBy A. S. Hewitt
After an interval of fourteen years, saddened for all of us by the death of David Thomas, the father of the anthracite iron-trade, first president of the Institute, and by the untimely loss of his suc
Jan 1, 1891
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Tripoli (83701b72-647c-4991-98a2-dbe9d6b8a8f6)By Henry P. Chandler
Tripoli is the general name for a number of fine-grained, lightweight, friable, minutely porous, forms of decomposed siliceous rock, probably derived from siliceous limestones or calcareous cherts. Tr
Jan 1, 1960