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A Unique Approach To Get Oil Shale Out Of The GroundBy C. DeWitt Smith
"It just looks like everything is doing fine but humans," wrote Will Rogers fifty years ago. "Animals are having a great year, grass was never higher, flowers were never more in bloom, trees are throw
Jan 10, 1974
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Reservoir Engineering - General - Results of a Tertiary Hot Waterflood in a Thin Sand ReservoirBy W. L. Martin, J. N. Dew, H. B. Steves, M. L. Powers
This paper presents and discusses the results obtained during a pilot test in the Loco field in southern Okla homa. The test was conducted in a 2%-acre pattern that was part of a 20-acre conventional
Jan 1, 1969
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Investigations Of - Coal-Dust ExplosionsBy George Rice
THE subject of dust explosions in coal mines first appears in the Transactions of this Institute following the first great mine disaster that happened in bituminous mines of the United States. This wa
Jan 10, 1914
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Blasting Practices for Improved Coal Strip Mine Highwall Safety and CostBy Michael F. Dunn, Francis S. Kendorski
The fall of rock from strip coal mine highwalls continues to be the largest single source of fatal accidents, so methods to improve highwall stability through improved blasting practices were investig
Jan 1, 1983
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Equilibrium Relations in Aluminum-copper Alloys of High PurityBy E. H. Jr. Dix
OF all the alloying elements used in commercial aluminum alloys, copper stands out as by far the most important, and it is perhaps for this reason that the constitution of the aluminum-copper system h
Jan 2, 1926
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Mexican Paper - The Treatment of Clay-Slimes by the Cyanide Process and AgitationBy E. A. H. Tays, F. A. Schiertz
In 1893 the Anglo-Mexican Mining Company, Limited, purchased the Guadalupe and adjoining mines, and, after opening up the Guadalupe, constructed a 20-stamp mill, which was started in August, 1894.
Jan 1, 1902
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Melting of Malleable Nickel and Nickel AlloysBy C. G. Bieber, R. F. Decker
The effects of minor constituents on the malleability of nickel alloys are described. These effects are related to the atomic diameter, valence, and position on the Periodic Table. The basic methods f
Jan 1, 1962
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New Techniques In Beneficiation Of The Florida Phosphates Of The FutureBy J. E. Lawver, J. D. Raulerson, J. P. Bernardi, R. S. Hearon, D. Lynch, G. F. McKereghan
Despite recent economic problems, the future of the Florida phosphate industry appears optimistic. Florida has enormous reserves and will continue to produce a third of the world's phosphate supp
Jan 1, 1985
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Geology - Lineament Tectonics and Some Ore Districts of the SouthwestBy Evans B. Mayo
This study examines the structural framework of the Southwest for evidence of the four principal trends of lineament tectonics. It attempts to classify their intersections and compares the positions o
Jan 1, 1959
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Welded Pressure Vessels (1623d450-97d1-4346-84f4-4a7d2f17e530)By R. K. Hopkins
For a great many years fusion welding has been used in and around petroleum refineries, but it is only within six or seven years that the more important pressure vessels have been constructed by this
Jan 1, 1935
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Strength and Aging Characteristics of the Nickel BronzesBy E. M. Wise
THE practice of adding moderate quantities of nickel to a variety of bronzes has been employed by foundrymen for many years with several objects in view. In some instances it was desired- to harden th
Jan 1, 1934
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Geology - Uranium Mineralization in the Sunshine Mine, IdahoBy Paul F. Kerr, Raymond F. Robinson
Uranium mineralization occurs in the footwall of the Sunshine vein from the 2900 to the 3700 level. Veinlets of uraninite associated with pyrite and jasper have been so extensively divided and recemen
Jan 1, 1954
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Drilling-Equipment, Methods and Materials - Experimental Study of Crater Formation in Limestone at Elevated PressuresBy C. Gatlin, N. E. Garner, A. Podio
Experimental data from single chisel blows on Leuders limestone are presented. A pressure chamber, similar in design to well known microbit drilling chambers, was utilized to impose variorcs stress st
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Birmingham Paper - Notes on the Geology and on some of the Mines of Aspen Mountain, Pitkin County, ColoradoBy Carl Henrich
Aspen, the flourishing mountain- and mining-town of Pitkin county, Colorado, is located in the valley of the Roaring Fork, 11 miles above Glenwood springs, where that stream empties its waters into Gr
Jan 1, 1889
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Part IX - Papers - Temperature Measurements and Fluid Flow Distributions Ahead of Solid-Liquid InterfacesBy G. S. Cole
The temperature has been measured ahead of stationary solid-liquid interfaces under conditions approximating luzidirectional heat flow and therefore unidirectional solidification. Natural convection f
Jan 1, 1968
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New Haven Paper - The Lodes of Cripple CreekBy T. A. Rickard
In a former paper* the writer has described the essential features of the general geology of the Cripple Creek region. In the present account it is intended to examine into the occurrence of the ores,
Jan 1, 1903
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Minerals Beneficiation - Low-Temperature Carbonization of Lignite and Noncoking Coals in the Entrained StateBy E. O. Wagner, V. F. Parry, W. S. Landers
Development work has shown that the yield of primary tar from coal is proportional to the heat in the volatile matter of the coal and that the yield of tar from noncoking coals may vary from 10 to 45
Jan 1, 1957
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Discussions - Institute of Metals Division page 1312C. M. Bishop (Aircraft Div., A. V. Roe Cnnada Ltd., Toronto)—Reference is made to the coherency hardening of ß due to ß' and also to the hardening of ß due to a coherent precipitation of the a ph
Jan 1, 1955
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Technical Papers and Notes - Extractive Metallurgy Division - A Kinetic Study of the Dissolution of UO2 in Sulfuric AcidBy M. E. Wadsworth, T. L. MacKay
Sintered UO, samples were leached in sulfuric acid solutions of various concentrations. A pressurized system was used so that it was possible to investigate the kinetics of the reaction to 270°C with
Jan 1, 1959
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Producing–Equipment, Methods and Materials - Improved Compositions for Cementing Wells with Extreme TemperaturesBy W. A. Walker, G. W. Ostroot
An increase in the number of deep wells being drilled where extreme bottom-hole temperatures are encountered, and the anticipated drilling of wells where temperatures in the range of 500°F or higher m