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Survey Of World Lead And Zinc ProductionBy Allen L. Hatch
A survey of all phases of the world's lead and zinc production in 1968 from ore through to refined metal was conducted by sending questionnaires to individual companies and the results of this su
Jan 1, 1970
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Canadian Paper - The Geology and Vein-Phenomena of ArizonaBy Theo B. Comstock
Since 1892 the writer has published several articles in the Engineering and Mining Journal concerning the relations of the
Jan 1, 1901
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Geographical List Of Members (3a2fa315-84cc-442e-9477-1c902b153ed6)[NORTH AMERICA UNITED STATES ALABAMA Birmingham Cord, Richard H. Dlsmukes, Edward B. Hunter, Robert A. Citronelle Perrin, Huey P. Fairfield Pagel, Herbert Ervin Fairhope Ruffle
Jan 1, 1961
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Papers - Cleveland Meeting – September, 1929 – Change in Microstructure of Iron at the A3 Transformation Point (With Discussion)By B. A. Rogers
The etching effect that is produced on a piece of polished iron or steel when it is heated in hydrogen or in a vacuum seems to have been observed first by Osmond,' who believed that he could dist
Jan 1, 1929
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Chattanooga Paper - Investigation on JiggingBy Royal Preston Jarvis
The jig, in one form or another, continues to hold a leading place among the machines designed to separate two or more
Jan 1, 1909
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Dewatering And DryingBy H. A. Baumann, A. J. Rostosky
EVER since the first installation of wet-washing methods of coal preparation, the removal of the water added by the washing process has created serious technical and operating problems. The rapid deve
Jan 1, 1943
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Papers - Magnetic Methods - Practical Geomagnetic Exploration with the Hotchkiss Superdip (With Discussion)By Noel H. Stearn
To the successful functioning of the geomagnetic method of exploration in engineering and geological practice there are two prime prerequisites : the measurability and the interpretability of signific
Jan 1, 1932
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Part IX - The Influence of Vanadium on the Activity of Carbon in the Fe-C-V System at 1000°C; Correlation of the Influence of Substitutional Solutes on the Activity Coefficient of Carbon in Iron-Base SystemsBy Richard R. Zupp, David A. Stevenson
An experimental method to determine the carbon activity in various solid solutions was developed. Samples of the solid solutions and an Fe-C reference sample were equilibrated with respect to carbon c
Jan 1, 1967
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Reservoir Engineering – Laboratory Research - Swept Areas After Breakthrough in Vertically Fractu...By R. O. Leach, O. W. Wagner
Because of unfavorable wetting conditions much residual oil is left when a porous material is Pushed by water. Methods suggested to change reservoir wetting to improve oil displncernrnt efficiency are
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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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The Basic Oxygen Steelmaking Process - Historical DevelopmentIN the decade beginning 1850, the development by William Kelly in I the U.S.A. and Henry Bessemer in England of the pneumatic method of refining pig iron, known as the Bessemer process, gave the world
Jan 1, 1964
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Papers - Gold and Silver Milling and Cyaniding - Cyanidation at Kirkland LakeBy Donald F. Irwin
Amid the violent economic changes of recent years that have affected Canadian gold-mining operations so deeply, the discovery and early developments of Kirkland Lake might easily be overlooked. There
Jan 1, 1935
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Reservoir Engineering – Laboratory Research - The Deterioration of Miscible Zones in Porous MediaBy Francis R. Conley, John A. Sievert, John N. Dew
A brief review is presented of the past performance of a number of large, thin, highly permeable reservoirs with low dips in the Bolivar Coastal fields of Venezuela. The performance of these reservoir
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Subsidence Above Abandoned Coal MinesBy Richard E. Gray, Robert W. Bruhn
INTRODUCTION Underground coal mining has been practiced in the United States for over 200 years. Much early mining was not as efficient as today and unrecovered coal pillars, often of variable siz
Jan 1, 1982
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No Real Scarcity of Lead LikelyBy Francis H. Brownell
During the 1920's lead consumption in the United States reached the highest average total ever known. For the ten-year period 1921-'30, it was slightly over 600,000 tons per year, or say 50,
Jan 1, 1941
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Reservoir Engineering-Laboratory Research - Laboratory Model Study of Single Five-Spot and Single Injection Well Pilot WaterfloodingBy F. F. Craig
Many full-scale waterflooding operations are preceded by pilot floods, one purpose of which is to provide an estimate of recoverable oil. A laboratory model study was made to determine the influence o
Jan 1, 1966
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Part II - Papers - Fatigue Fracture in Copper and the Cu-8Wt Pct Al Alloy at Low TemperatureBy W. A. Backofen, D. L. Holt
Push-pull fatigue tests have been carried out at 4.2°K, 77oK, and room temperature on two poly crystalline materials of widely different stacking-fault energy (?): pure copper (? - 70 ergs per sq cm)
Jan 1, 1968
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Steelmaking - Role of Thermochemical Factors in Basic Open Hearth Production Rate (Metals Tech., October 1948 T.P. 2451)By B. M. Larsen, T. E. Brower
Introduction and Summary By "thermochemical factors" we refer to those variables which affect the net heat which must be put into the bath in order to make a heat of steel from any given set of charge
Jan 1, 1949
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Steelmaking - Role of Thermochemical Factors in Basic Open Hearth Production Rate (Metals Tech., October 1948 T.P. 2451)By B. M. Larsen, T. E. Brower
Introduction and Summary By "thermochemical factors" we refer to those variables which affect the net heat which must be put into the bath in order to make a heat of steel from any given set of charge
Jan 1, 1949
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What Duty to Support the Surface Does a Subsurface Owner Owe? (ac77f398-14ce-419b-9790-907668f7e461)By Robert Bosworth
THE liability for damages to the surface caused by subsidence is an ever present threat in all underground mining. In ordinary lode mining, this threat rarely materializes into an action, due to the m
Jan 1, 1928