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Chicago Paper -Sulphur in Cast-IronBy W. J. Keep
Almost without exception, writers on the subject say that sulphur in cast-iron will cause it to be white, and is in every way injurious. All founders believe that a small amount of sulphur in the fuel
Jan 1, 1894
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Boston Paper - Trough-LixiviationBy Ottokar Hofmann
In tank-lixiviation, the extraction of the silver from chloridized ore by solutions of hyposulphite salts is performed by filtration. The ore-particles are kept stationary, while the solvent moves dow
Jan 1, 1888
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Fundamental Phase Behavior of HydrocarbonsBy John Sherbourne
Much valuable scientific research has been performed in recent years on the subject of phase behavior of hydrocarbons. ? 1-11 Engineers employed in petroleum production are interesting themselves in t
Jan 1, 1940
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Future Slurry Transport of Large Particles Based on Operations with Coarse CoalBy D. L. McCain
Slurry transportation of coarse coal from the mining face to the preparation plant has proved successful in a West Virginia underground mine. Coal has been pumped from the mining section for several m
Jan 1, 1976
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Institute of Metals Division - On the Thermally-Activated Mechanism of Prismatic Slip in the Silver-Aluminum Hexagonal Intermediate PhaseBy Jim D. Mote, Eugenia M. Howard, Willis L. Barmore, John E. Dorn
The effect of stress and temperature on the creep rate of Ag-33 at. pct A1 and Ag-33 at. pct Al-1 at. pct Zn for prismatic slip was determined over a range of temperatures from 440º to 700°K. The al
Jan 1, 1963
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Unique Mining Operation Yields Rutile And ApliteBy W. W. Coffeen, K. E. Doud
A singular mineral extraction and processing operation is conducted by Metal & Thermit Corp. in Hanover County, Va. The mine presently produces aplite rock, rutile and ilmenite. The deposit lies in
Jan 10, 1962
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Hydrologic Investigation Of The Middle Tennessee Zinc DistrictBy Frederick T. Fischer
The New Jersey Zinc Company began a program of exploration in Middle Tennessee in 1964. The target horizon of the exploration project has been the Knox Dolomite which is a low-yield aquifer over nearl
Jan 1, 1970
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Reservoir Engineering-General - The Effects of Existing Fracture in Rocks on the Extension of Hydraulic FracturesBy F. W. Jessen, N. Lamont
The effect of an existing fracture or joint plane, which may exist in a rock, on the extension of a hydraulically induced fracture through the rock has been investigated in the laboratory. By use of a
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Concentration of Blackbird Cobalt Ore by Roast-FlototionBy S. R. Zimmerley, S. F. Ravitz
High-grade cobalt concentrates were produced from the complex Blackbird ore with very good recovery in continuous pilot-plant operations in which a low-grade bulk cobaltite-pyrite flotation concentrat
Jan 1, 1950
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Controlling Dust Emissions at Belt Conveyor Transfer Points (9e3dac9a-2c9f-40ff-9569-f9a4bb2a9e40)By Joseph N. Morrison
A comprehensive solution is offered to the problem of dust emissions at belt conveyor transfer points. Details of enclosure design are discussed and a straightforward procedure for calculating require
Jan 1, 1972
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Petroleum Industry In 1923 In Europe, Asia, And AfricaBy Henry Morris
AS STATED last year, in a similar review by David White and the author, any review of the petroleum industry purporting to cover such a wide field can only mention the principal facts. This incomplete
Jan 3, 1924
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Buffalo Paper - Graphic Records of the Screening of Crushed MaterialsBy Courtenay de Kalb
So far as the writer is aware, no detailed investigation into the behavior of ores or rocks when subjected to crushing under digerent conditions has yet been made. He cannot himself claim to have carr
Jan 1, 1899
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Petroleum Economics - Postwar Inventories of Crude Oil and Petroleum Products in the United States (T. P. 1870, Petr. Tech., May 1945)By Albert J. McIntosh
With petroleum consumption declining temporarily after V-J day, the oil industry is urged to use this period as a kind of stopgap to rebuild its war-depleted inventories and help cushion the effect of
Jan 1, 1945
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St. Louis Paper - Geosynclines and Petroliferous Deposits (with Discussion)By Marcel R. Daly
In a preceding paper1 the writer has pointed out some apparent relationship between the distribution, on the surface of the globe,, of the known hydrocarbon deposits and the disposition of the princip
Jan 1, 1918
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Geophysics - Ground, Helicopter, and Airborne Geophysical Surveys of Green Pond, N. J.By W. B. Agocs
IN August 1954 a low altitude test geophysical survey was made in the Green Pond area of Morris County, New Jersey, with a Gulf Research and Development Co. Model II total magnetic field variation mag
Jan 1, 1956
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Part VII - Application of the Weissenberg Goniometer to the Determination of the Orientation and Morphology of MircocrystalsBy R. S. Wagner, R. G. Treuting, W. C. Ellis
Use of the Weisseizbevg goniometer for the study of the morphology of whisker crystals and transfer of the results to a stereograplzic projection are described. While in almost all instances a complet
Jan 1, 1967
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Division Lectures - The 1963 Extractive Metallurgy Lecture; The Production of Reactive Metals - Retrospect and ProspectBy L. M. Pidgeon
The reactive metals are above manganese on the electromotive series. Their compounds are characterized by large heats of formation and they cannot be reduced from their ores by classical methods. Thre
Jan 1, 1963
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Atlanta, Ga Paper - The Gold-Regions of Georgia and AlabamaBy William M. Brewer
History.—The history of gold-mining in Georgia and Alabama antedates the discovery of gold in California. A very large proportion of the gold used in the United States previous to 1849 was produced by
Jan 1, 1896
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San Francisco Paper - Shot Firing by Electricity (with Discussion)By N. S. Greensfelder
The firing of explosive charges by electricity dates back to 1745 when a Doctor Watson is said to have used an electric spark for igniting gunpowder. His method failed in practical application because
Jan 1, 1923
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San Francisco Paper - Shot Firing by Electricity (with Discussion)By N. S. Greensfelder
The firing of explosive charges by electricity dates back to 1745 when a Doctor Watson is said to have used an electric spark for igniting gunpowder. His method failed in practical application because
Jan 1, 1923