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Geology Plays An Important Role In Radioactive Waste ManagementBy S. O. Reichert
The nuclear industry has made a considerable effort to reduce environmental pollution with the result that knowledge in the field of radioactive waste management is well advanced. An example of the me
Jan 9, 1968
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The Influence Of Rock Anisotropy On Stress Measurements By Overcoring TechniquesBy Bernard Amadei, Richard E. Goodman
A medium is anisotropic if its properties vary with direction. This is the general characteristic of many rocks, for example, schists, slates, gneisses, phyllites and other metamorphic rocks. Bedded a
Jan 1, 1982
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Papers - - Estimation of Petroleum Reserves - Estimation of Developed Petroleum ReservesBy M. Albertson
The purposes of this statement are to define a problem that exists in regard to the estimation of developed petroleum reserves, to analyze the problem in an abstract manner, and to discuss it as an in
Jan 1, 1936
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Papers - - Estimation of Petroleum Reserves - Estimation of Developed Petroleum ReservesBy M. Albertson
The purposes of this statement are to define a problem that exists in regard to the estimation of developed petroleum reserves, to analyze the problem in an abstract manner, and to discuss it as an in
Jan 1, 1936
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Technical Notes - Change in Ingot Shape During Zone MeltingBy W. G. Pfann
WHEN a molten zone traverses a long, solid ingot in a level, open boat the ingot becomes tapered. While the taper may be slight after one zone pass, it can be appreciable after repeated zone passes, e
Jan 1, 1954
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Behavior Of Closely Jointed RockBy J. C. Jaeger
It frequently happens in engineering and mining situations that "bad" rock is encountered which consists of rock broken up into blocks a few inches or less in diameter by a network of intersecting joi
Jan 1, 1970
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Effect of Composition and Steelmaking Practice on Graphitization below the A1 of Eighteen One Per Cent Plain Carbon SteelsBy Charles Austin
IT has long been known that plain high-carbon steels may be susceptible to graphiti-zation below the A, critical, but no data have been available to indicate what factors cause and tend to inhibit gra
Jan 1, 1940
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Refinery Products and Problems - Sources of Automotive Fuels (with Discussion)By F. A. Howard, R. T. Haslam
In a broad sense automotive fuel is simply fuel in general and includes coal, coke, wood, charcoal and gas, in addition to the full range of liquid combustibles. All of these are actually used, or hav
Jan 1, 1928
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Method of Making Mineralogical Analysis of Sand*By C. W. Tomlinson
INTRODUCTORY THE analyses which have been made by the writer according to the method described below were made as part of Professor Withey's investigation of the concrete aggregates' of Wis
Jan 5, 1915
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Chicago Paper - The Consumption of Fuel in the Taylor Gas-Producer Plants at the Aspen and Marsac Mills Compared (See Discussion p. 585)By C. A. Stetefeldt
It will be of interest to compare the statistics of the gas-producer plant at Aspen, Colorado (recorded by Mr. W. S. Morse in a paper read at the Montreal Meeting, February, 1893*), with those at the
Jan 1, 1894
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Three Big Factors In Stable Slope DesignBy C. O. Brawner
Simple, specific rules for achieving slope stability in open-pit mines are impossible to devise. Each pit has a different mining program and a different set of environmental conditions, and its final
Jan 8, 1969
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Pebble Milling Practice At The South African Gold Mines Of Union Corp. Ltd.By O. A. E. Jackson
Pebble milling has been practiced in the reduction works of South Africa gold mines for well over 50 years. Originally flint pebbles were imported from Denmark to grind stamp-mill amalgamation- proces
Jan 11, 1959
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Institute of Metals Division - Redistribution of Solutes by Formation and Solidification of a Molten ZoneBy W. G. Pfann
Formation and slow solidification of a molten zone in a homogeneous ingot produces a discontinuity in solute concentration at the boundary of the zone and a gradient of concentration within the zone.
Jan 1, 1955
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Institute of Metals Division - Growth Substructure in Rapidly Solidified Zn-2 Pct Au Alloys (TN)By F. Weinberg
WHEN impure Zn (< 99.99 pct)''Z or Zn-Cd alloys3 are progressively solidified, a cell or "corrugation" substructure4 is produced in the solid, with a high impurity or solute concentration al
Jan 1, 1963
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Precious-Metal Supplies And The Price LevelBy G. F. Loughlin
The subject of this lecture might well have been assigned to an economist or banker rather than to a geologist, but, as it was deliberately assigned to me, it is to be treated from a geologist's
Jan 1, 1932
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Some Interpretations of Earth-resistivity DataBy Irwin Roman
IN a previous paper,1 a method was suggested for determining the depth to a bed in the simple case of a uniform overlying layer of constant thickness. The main purpose of the present paper is to show
Jan 1, 1934
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A Critical Review of the Current State-of-the-Art Design of Mine PillarsBy Gordon M. Matheson, Charles V. Logie
The current state-of-the-art design of mine pillars can be grouped into empirical and numerical design techniques. Numerical design techniques are based on sophisticated computational techniques which
Jan 1, 1983
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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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Cost Overrun Risk And How It Was Minimized During Construction Of The Mt. Gunnison MineBy L. P. (Les) Haldane
Building a small underground coal mine is a risky endeavor, especially in the recent economic environment. ARCO's Mt. Gunnison No. 1 Mine, located in western Colorado, was designed and built as a
Jan 1, 1985
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Stripping Overburden With Nuclear ExplosivesBy Paul L. Russell
Of the potential applications of nuclear explosives to mining, excavation is perhaps the most obvious and the best understood, and probably the most practical for use in the near future. Large quantit
Jan 6, 1964