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Salt Occurrences in the Potash Mines of New MexicoBy Richard Ageton
SALT bodies in the form of rolls, horses (sometimes called horsebacks), folds, wants and pinches1 have been encountered while driving entries and mining out rooms during the development of the potash
Jan 1, 1936
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Aviation in Mining - Freight Planes Active in CanadaBy W. E. STOKES
SOME extension of flying service to the mining industry occurred in 1938, particularly in Canada, where freighting activity radiated from Edmonton into the new northern mining districts. Again the air
Jan 1, 1939
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Reservoir Engineering - General - Unit Mobility Ratio Displacement Front Passing a Circular Permeability DiscontinuityBy R. W. Parsons
wben a displacement front encounters an isolated permeability heterogeneity, it will be perturbed. The details of this perturbation will depend on the beterogeneity size and shape, the Permeability co
Jan 1, 1969
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Kick .Vs. Rittinger : An Experimental Investigation In Rock Crushing, Performed At Purdue UniversityBy Arthur Gates
INTRODUCTION RITTINGER'S law of the energy expended in crushing is, as roughly stated by Professor Richards,1 that the work of crushing is proportional to the reduction in diameter; or, as I hav
Jan 9, 1915
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Dust: Its Hazard, Control, and Collection with Especial Reference to Surface PlantsBy Geo. T. Lynch
PALEOLITHIC MAN, laboriously shaping a stone implement in his cave, discovered that the dust irritated his eyes and nostrils and hindered his labors, whereupon, muttering a few incantations, forerunne
Jan 1, 1938
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Elutriator Installation Upgrades Groveland's CapacityBy Lawrence P. Bonicatto
The steel industry's increased demand for higher grade pellets has caused the pellet producers to investigate methods of upgrading their product and the Hanna Mining Co.'s Groveland plant on
Jan 3, 1968
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Pittsburgh Paper - Note on the Reduction of Ferric Solutions by the Use of Amalgamated Zinc and Platinum FoilBy Alfred L. Beebe
to. A strip of thin platinum foil, about one inch square, is perforated with pin-holes over its entire surface. It is then bent into the shape of a letter U, and its opposite corners are connected by
Jan 1, 1886
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How to Operate Small Mine in Sonora, MexicoBy Howard H. Fields
Any mining engineer with a desire to operate independently, with some financial backing, and with no fear of heavy responsibility and long hours, should be able to make a comfortable living in Mexico.
Jan 11, 1950
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Geology and Mining Practice at the Bayard, N. Mex., PropertyBy Leo H. Duriez, James V. Neuman
THE Bayard property of the united States Smelting Refining and Mining Company is in south central Grant County in southwestern New Mexico about fifteen miles east of Silver City and one mile west of S
Jan 1, 1948
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The Impact Of Offshore Drilling Regulations On Energy And The Environment: The Case Of CaliforniaBy Donald W. Barnett
U.S. environmentalists have tended to oppose all new energy developments. Their efforts may be counterproductive because opposition to, say, offshore oil directly leads to the continued use of other e
Jan 1, 1977
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Atlantic City Paper - A Decade in American Blast-Furnace Practice (Discussion, p. 973)By F. Louis Grammer
The iron industry has been so markedly the cynosure of all eyes, that a sense of weariness has overtaken many on-lookers, and a new wonder is desired. While the commercial phase of the iron industr
Jan 1, 1905
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Seventy-Five Years Of Progress In The Anthracite IndustryBy Cadwallader Evans
THE American Institute of Mining Engineers was organized in the anthracite region of Pennsylvania by men who were primarily interested in anthracite. Its first meeting, at Wilkes-Barre, Pa., in the No
Jan 1, 1947
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Steam Pollution - General Review of U. S. Bureau of Mines Stream-pollution Investigation (With Discussion)By R. D. Leitch, W. P. Yant, R. R. Sayers
In 1924, the United States Public Health Service was requested to undertake a special study of stream pollution. The Public Health Service asked the United States Bureau of Mines to take up the study
Jan 1, 1931
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The Relative PronounsAn educated man is distinguished neither by his clothes nor by his knowledge; he is remarkable not for the things he says, but for the way he says them. You cannot even stand with him under an archway
Jan 1, 1931
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Institute of Metals Division - Discussion: The Hot Ductility of NickelBy P. Shahinian, M. R. Achter
P. Shahinian and M. R. Achter (U.S. Naval Research Laboratory)—We should like to point out another instance where concentration of impurities in grain boundaries led to an embrittlement. In this case
Jan 1, 1965
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Uses Ammonia Leach for Lynn Lake Ni-Cu-Co SulphidesHere are the details . . . . . of how a $2.5 million research gamble, now backed by five years of intensive development in cooperation with the Chemical Construction Corp. resulted in a hydrometollurg
Jan 6, 1953
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Minerals Beneficiation - Solvent Extraction of Chromium III from Sulfate Solutions by a Primary AmineBy D. S. Flett, D. W. West
The solvent extraction of chromium 111 has been studied for the system Cr 111, H,SO., H,O/RNH/RNH., xylene, where the primary amine used was Primene JMT. Rate studies have shown that extremely long eq
Jan 1, 1971
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Institute of Metals Division - Prot Fatigue Study of an Aircraft Steel in the Ultra High Strength RangeBy P. W. Ramsey, D. P. Kedzie
INCREASING demand for improved strength-weight ratios made on aircraft structures has resulted in a gradual increase in the tensile strength requirements for steels used in such applications. As the c
Jan 1, 1958
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Reservoir Engineering – Laboratory Research - Fluid Dynamics During an Underground Combustion ProcessBy J. H. Henderson, L. A. Wilson, R. L. Gergins, R. J. Wygal, D. W. Reed
This paper presents a method of predicting the production history of an underground combustion recovery process. A rigorous solution of the thermodynamics and hydrodynamics involved is beyond the scop
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Air Injection and Hot-Film Flow Logging for Evaluation of Roof Cracks in White Pine MineBy Harold E. Thomas, Samuel S. M. Chan, Nicholas Bada
The U.S. Bureau of Mines has developed a technique for locating and evaluating bedding plane cracks in mine roof by an air-injection and hot-film flow logging technique. It is ultrasensitive to cracks
Jan 1, 1975