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Lime (4be0a373-3093-45dd-99da-38e2a300e547)By Nathan C. Rockwood
LIME is a very general term applied to products of limestone, in popular treatises often incorrectly, including ground or pulverized limestone used in agriculture. When used without qualifying adjecti
Jan 1, 1949
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Members Dine and DanceBy AIME AIME
HOLDING the annual dinner-dance of the Institute at the Waldorf-Astoria had become such a tradition that there was widespread regret when it became known that the demolition of the building to make wa
Jan 1, 1930
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Filled StopesA filled stope is one in which the support for walls and men and, at times, for the back of ore, is furnished by waste rock or sand tailings. The filling may be rock sorted out in the stope or from th
Jan 1, 1925
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Colorado Paper - Some Mines of Rosita and Silver Cliff, ColoradoBy S. F. Emmons
The history of the mining region of Custer county has been somewhat peculiar. Although, in the broader features of geological structure, it bears a strong resemblance to its newer and now more famous
Jan 1, 1897
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New York Paper - American Students of Mining in GermanyBy J. C. Bartlett
As American students of mining, philosophy, philology, music, history, or art have found it necessary or highly advantageous to supplement their course of study at home by a residence of some years at
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AIME CentennialJune was the month in which AIME was founded in the year of 1871. For some reason, February was selected as the month for the legal Annual Meeting. One can't help thinking wistfully of Annual Mee
Jan 1, 1971
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Atlantic City Paper - Mining Districts of Colombia (Discussion, 803 ; see also p. 591)By Henry G. Granger, Edward B. Treville
The Republic of Colombia is the northernmost country of South America. Its northern coast line exteilds from the frontier of Costa Rica to that of Venezuela, on the Caribbean Sea. On the west it front
Jan 1, 1899
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Institute of Metals Division - Stacking Faults in Platinum (TN)By F. R. Brotzen, J. Taranto
SEVERAL investigators have computed stacking-fault concentrations from X-ray diffraction data.'-' The method generally employed relates the line shift to the stacking-fault probability. In t
Jan 1, 1962
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Screening (3cf1deef-62a3-4f77-8aa2-8b850346b10d)By John S. Johnson, Thomas Fraser
SIZING is the process of separating mixed particles into groups of particles all of the same size, or into groups in which all particles range between certain definite maximum and minimum sizes. In co
Jan 1, 1950
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Indium-treated Bearing Metals (0fdc1a93-ba0d-4b24-9d5e-18d92be3b4c7)By C. F. Smart
SINCE their comparatively recent development, the alloys of cadmium with silver and copper or nickel, and of cadmium with nickel alone, have been used somewhat extensively as liners for connecting rod
Jan 1, 1938
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Cleveland Paper - The Effect of High Carbon on the Quality of Charcoal-Iron (with Discussion)By J. E. Johnson
Charcoal-iron is quantitively so unimportant compared with coke-iron, that its qualitative importance for many industrial purposes is entirely unkriown to many coke-furnace-men, and to the great major
Jan 1, 1913
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Hydrogen Embrittlement of Pure Copper and of Dilute Copper Alloys by Alternate Oxidation and ReductionBy Frederick Rhines
THE investigations of Wyman1 have demonstrated that copper deoxidized with several of the commonly used agents that confer immunity to ordinary hydrogen em-brittlement can still be embrittled if it is
Jan 1, 1940
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Arizona Paper - The Diastrophic Theory (with Discussion)By Marcel R. Daly
The writer has devoted a number of years to practical operations and to the study of geology in the oil fields. In consequence, he has been brought to investigate the theories advanced to account for
Jan 1, 1917
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Charging And Melting PracticeCHARGING of an open-hearth heat is begun as soon as possible after the previous heat has been tapped. Ordinarily, about 40 min. is required to drain and dress the furnace hearth, make up the tap hole,
Jan 1, 1944
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Book IXBy Herbert Clark Hoover, Lou Henry Hoover
SINCE I have written of the varied work of pre- paring the ores, I will now write of the various methods of smelting them. Although those who bum, roast and calcinea the ore, take from it something wh
Jan 1, 1950
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New York Paper - Corrosion of Copper Alloys in Sea Water (with Discussion)By W. H. Bassett, C. H. Davis
The late J. P. Sparrow, chief operating engineer of the New York Edison CO., carried out a series of practical tests on condenser tubes of several copper alloys and reported on the results to the Asso
Jan 1, 1925
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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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Recording PyrometryBy C. O. Fairchild
ONE of the fundamental principles of efficiency is the use of adequate and permanent records. The rapid increase in the manufacture and use of recording pryometers is a proof of the appreciation of ef
Jan 9, 1919
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Crystallography of Austenite DecompositionBy Alden Greninger
METALLURGISTS have long believed that martensite in steel forms as plates along the octahedral {111} planes of austenite. Much has been written about mechanisms whereby units of the austenite lattice
Jan 1, 1940
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Colorado Paper - Metallography of Tungsten (with Discussion)By Zay Jeffries
Tungsten has the highest melting point of all the known metals, namely 3350 C.; it is one of the hardest of the metals; it has the highest equiaxing or recrystallization temperature after strain harde
Jan 1, 1919