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An Unusual Test of the Accuracy of Well-SurveyingBy S. H. Williston
IT is not often that bore hole surveys can be checked by actual civil engineering methods. A recent Arizona survey was checked by normal surveying methods and the comparison of the results should be o
Jan 1, 1950
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San Francisco Paper - Suggestions Regarding the Determination of the Properties of Steel (with Discussion)By Alexandre Mitinsky
The theory of elasticity, the science of the strength of materials, and all our calculations regarding engineering structures are based on Hooke's law, that in loaded bodies the deformations are
Jan 1, 1916
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PotashBy Samuel S. Adams
Potash, the generic term for a variety of potassium-bearing minerals, ores, and refined products (Table I), owes its importance as an industrial mineral to the potassium requirement of growing plants.
Jan 1, 1975
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BlastingBy Joseph S. Malesky
The discovery and development of explosives mark one of the most important findings in the history of civilization. Without explosives our vast economic enterprise concerning the mining of coal, coppe
Jan 1, 1981
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Papers - Theory of Metallic Crystal Aggregates (With Discussion)By Charles G. Maier
It has long been supposed that when crystalline materials are comminuted the energy used in the production of increasingly smaller grain sizes is not entirely dissipated as heat but that a certain por
Jan 1, 1936
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Improvements In The. Series System Of Electrolytic Copper Refining Recently Developed By The Nichols Copper Co.By M. H. Merriss
IN THE last few years, there have been developed at the plant of the Nichols Copper Co., Laurel Hill, Borough of Queens, New York City, improvements in electrolytic copper refining by the series syste
Jan 6, 1925
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Data Pertaining To Gas Cleaning At The Düquesne Blast FurnacesBy A. N. Diehl
IT is the object of this paper (1) to deal with the elements in blast-furnace gas from the standpoint of their importance, and the part they are to play in future consumption, and (2) to give detailed
Jan 5, 1914
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Evaluation and Prediction of Optimum Cleaning ResultsBy F. F. Peng, A. D. Walters, M. R. Geer, J. W. Leonard
INTRODUCTION Washability characteristics derived from float-and-sink analysis in Chapter 4 demonstrate that coal is intrinsically heterogeneous, and this heterogeneity is also evident in the proxi
Jan 1, 1979
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Minerals Beneficiation - Mechanisms of Soluble Salt Flotation. Part IBy D. C. Seidel, M. C. Fuerstenau, R. J. Roman
The existence of a surface charge on the alkali halide salts is shown, and a flotation mechanism involving surface charge and collector solubility is developed. Data suggest that KC1 is positively cha
Jan 1, 1969
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Exudations On Brass And BronzeBy W. B. Price
AT the New York meeting of the American Institute of Mining-and Metallurgical Engineers held in February, 1926, W. H. Bassett and J. C. Bradley presented a paper entitled "Exudations on Copper Casting
Jan 10, 1926
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On an Eccentric TheodoliteBy Francis L. Vinton
THE eccentric theodolite I exhibit is one constructed by the Stack-poles of New York, from drawings, considerably modified, of Combes's theodolite. The telescope is on one side of the horizontal
Jan 1, 1873
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Bethlehem Paper - An Eccentric TheodoliteBy Francis L. Vinton
THE eccentric theodolite I exhibit is one constructed by the Stack poles of New York, from drawings, considerably modified, of Combes's theodolite. The telescope is on one side of the horizontal
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Part IV – April 1969 - Papers - Tensile Ductility of Steel Studied with UltrasonicsBy W. F. Chiao
With the application of dislocation damping theory an attempt was made to determine whether the generation and extension of dislocations is inherently more difficult in a brittle steel than in a ducti
Jan 1, 1970
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Variants Influencing Austenite Grain Size as Determined by Standards MethodsBy R. Schempp
DURING the past few years, general interest in the steel-producing and steel-consuming industries has been centered on the so-called "inherent characteristics" of steels. While often vaguely described
Jan 1, 1937
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Tracing a Basic Dike, Near Chapel Hill, N. C. by Geoelectrical and Geomagnetic MethodsBy W. R. Johnson
In the spring of 1935 the writers undertook to compare the geomagnetic and direct-current earth-resistivity methods of tracing a concealed dike along its strike. As far as they are aware no such direc
Jan 1, 1937
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Officers and Directors (64092938-ace8-4faa-8529-71148e936040)PRESIDENT GEORGE OTIS SMITH, District 4 WASHINGTON, D. C. PAST PRESIDENTS SAMUEL A. TAYLOR, District 3 PITTSBURGH, PA. E. DEGOLYER District 0 NEW YORK, N. Y. FIRST VICE-PRESIDENT W. H. BASSETT
Jan 1, 1923
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Technical Notes - The Conduction of Heat Incident to the Flow of Vaporizing Fluids in Porous MediaBy Frank G. Miller, Ralph A. Seban
Problems relating to thermal methods of oil recovery have been given increasing attention during the past year. The nature of the physical and chemical processes underlying thermal recovery are not ye
Jan 1, 1956
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Electrical Coring; a Method of Determining Bottom-hole Data by Electrical MeasurementsBy C. Schlumberger
SINCE the, beginning of the year 1928 the senior authors and their associates have applied a series of procedures which makes possible the detailed study in situ of the formations traversed by a drill
Jan 1, 1932
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History of the Flotation Process at InspirationBy Rudolf Gahl
THE history of flotation in America is very short, at least as far as the large-scale application of the process is concerned. It is remarkable how many important developments have taken place inn the
Jan 9, 1916
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Part IX – September 1969 – Communications - Flow of Liquid Tin in a Square EnclosureBy M. J. Stewart, F. Weinberg
PREVIOUS investigations into convective flow in molten metals have examined systems in which the length-to-height ratio of the enclosure is large, usually using long graphite boats.''2 In no
Jan 1, 1970