Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
-
Exxon Minerals Company, U.S.A. Highland Uranium Operations Geology And Mining MethodsBy Ronald A. Murdock
INTRODUCTION Exxon's Highland Uranium Operations in eastern Wyoming consists of an open pit, an underground mine and a mill complex. The geology of the deposit is reviewed in this paper, and
Jan 1, 1983
-
Men Needed On SubmarinesIt is desired to call the attention of young men who have had technical training and experience to the fact that their abilities can best be put at the service of the country by selecting a branch of
Jan 7, 1918
-
Observations on Control of the Coal Dust Explosion Hazard in European MinesBy D. S. Kingery, D. W. Mitchell
Experience in Europe indicates that the control of dust production and dissemination by water or foam systems is not successful except during undercutting. Cybulski, Dawes, and DeBraaf-respectively Di
Jan 7, 1964
-
Laboratory Investigation - Flocculation To Improve Coal Slurry FiltrationBy M. R. Geer, H. F. Yancey, P. S. Jacobsen
Two growing problems confront the preparation engineer-still further restrictions on stream pollution and a greater proportion of fine coal as more and more continuous miners come into use. The dewate
Jan 7, 1959
-
The Drift Of Things (00daabbf-96ab-4e11-8ce0-d137d7b07798)By John V. Beall
W hen the blasts went off on West 11th St., just off 5th Ave. in New York City, James Michaels, editor of Forbes magazine, was in his office a few doors away reviewing color layouts with his productio
Jan 1, 1970
-
Industrial Section (27fbd4af-5f76-41b6-896d-263458b5b9b6)In Bulletin J 1, recently published by the Traylor Engineering and Manufacturing Co., it is stated that the largest jaw crusher ever built has a jaw opening of 66 in. by 86 in. and weighs 680,000 1b.
Jan 10, 1916
-
Coal - The Preparation of Coal Refuse for the Manufacture of Light Weight AggregateBy T. S. Spice, H. L. Lovell, R. W. Utley
With the increased demand for lightweight aggregate, such materials have been manufactured from slags, clays, slates and, to a minor extent, the refuse of coal preparation processes. The latter source
Jan 1, 1965
-
Utilization Of Slag In The Birmingham District, AlabamaBy James Cudworth
THE Birmingham district of Alabama has utilized the slag from its blast furnaces consistently since the earliest development of the slag industry. Today there are producers of slag cement who started
Jan 1, 1937
-
Institute of Metals Division - Formation of Sigma Phase and Its Effect on the Workability of Mo-Re Alloys (TN)By C. Feng, P. Levesque
HE addition of rhenium to molybdenum is known to produce alloys with good workability.' Lawley and Maddin found that the critical stress for twinning in this system was lowered by the addition of
Jan 1, 1962
-
Rio Algom Investigations into Preconcentration of Uranium OreBy M. E. Grimes
Rio Algom Mines Ltd. owns eight uranium mines and mills in the Elliot Lake district of Ontario, seven of which were producing before 1960. At present only one mine is operating and meeting current con
Jan 1, 1974
-
Loose Rock Can Be Detected By Infrared DevicesBy Robert H. Merrill, Raymond M. Stateham
Recently, the Denver Mining Research Center of the U.S. Bureau of Mines began tests to detect hazardous or potentially hazardous conditions in or around mines with infrared measurement devices. Among
Jan 1, 1970
-
Reservoir Rock Characteristics - Generation of a Synthetic Vertical Profile of a Fluvial Sandstone BodyBy R. F. Blakely, P. E. Potter
Any stratigraphic section or bedding sequence can be synthesized if there is a transition procedure from one lithology or bedding type to another, and if thickness distributions of the different litho
-
Reservoir Engineering–General - Performance Prediction of a Miscible-Slug Process in a Highly Stratified ReservoirBy J. B. Agan, R. J. Fernandes
This paper utilizes the layered-system approach, modified to include areal sweep efficiency, to determine the miscible-slug size required and to predict the perfort7zance of a miscible-slug process in
-
Iron and Steel Division - Exchange of Iron Between Liquid Metal and Iron Silicate SlagsBy C. E. Birchenall, G. Derge
IN studying the kinetics of slag-metal reactions, it has become increasingly apparent that a complete knowledge of all aspects of interface phenomena will be required to clarify these processes adequa
Jan 1, 1954
-
Refuse Pile Design ConsiderationsBy Thomas J. Sawarynski
This paper discusses current trends of coarse and fine coal refuse disposal techniques. Emphasis is on site-specific engineering used by coal companies to tailor safe, cost effective, and environmenta
Jan 1, 1982
-
New York Paper - The Work of the Testing Department of the Watertown Arsenal, in Its Relation to the Metallurgy of SteelBy James E. Howard
At the request of the Council of the Institute, I have the honor to submit the following remarks upon the Program of Tests under which the current work of the Watertown Arsenal Testing Laboratory is c
Jan 1, 1909
-
Technical Notes - The Effect of Working and Heating Eutectic StructuresBy J. S. Brown, A. G. Guy
With the exception of the work of Tammann and Hartmann,1 no published information has been found on the structural changes produced in eutectic structures as the result of heating following plastic de
Jan 1, 1950
-
Ore Control Methods At Inspiration Consolidated Copper CompanyBy J. L. Carne
ORE control is a matter of planning and supervision based on a foreknowledge of the content and distribution of ore. The Inspiration orebody is predominately a copper-sulphide blanket, overlain by an
Jan 1, 1952
-
Iron and Steel Division - Effect of Silica Reduction on the Desulphurizing Power of Blast-Furnace Type slagBy Nicholas J. Grant, Olaf Troili, John Chipman
IN recent studies of the factors which affect the rate of desulphurization and its equilibrium, it became apparent that certain concurrent reactions were operative which had a significant effect on de
Jan 1, 1952
-
Problems Involved In The Concentration And. Utilization Of Domestic Low-Grade Manganese, Ore -DiscussionC. W. GOODALE,* Butte, Mont.-I notice Mr. Newton refers very briefly to the carbonate ores of manganese, rhodochrosite, but he does not go into any special description of the treatment of that materia
Jan 4, 1919