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The Magnetic Concentration Of Low-Grade Iron OresBy S. Norton
IN the West, capitalists have expended many millions of dollars developing the low-grade porphyry ores of copper. Half a dozen of these great enterprises have proved to be wonderful commercial success
Jan 2, 1917
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The CatalystsTeamwork: The famous first sentence of an essay en- titled Aphorisms, by Hippocrates, is as follows: "Life is short, the Art long, opportunity fleeting, experience treacherous, judgment difficult." Th
Jan 1, 1950
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Some Pressing Needs of our Iron and Steel Manufactures.*By A. L. Holley
IT has been customary at our opening sessions, for the presiding officer to address you on the general development of one or another of our several professions, or upon some important feature of Minin
Jan 1, 1876
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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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Research - Potentiometric-model Studies of Fluid Flow in Petroleum Reservoirs (TP 2262 Petr. Tech., Sept. 1947)By R. D. Lee
A simplification of the method of Hurst and McCarty for conducting potentiometric model studies by the single probe method is presented along with experimentally determined invasion patterns for certa
Jan 1, 1948
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Government Controls Of Competition In The Mineral IndustriesBy Richard L. Gordon
THE PROBLEMS AND POSSIBLE SOLUTIONS Toward the end of the 19th century, American industry began a drastic reorganization. The many, small, often-regional firms were supplanted by large national cor
Jan 1, 1976
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Research - Potentiometric-model Studies of Fluid Flow in Petroleum Reservoirs (TP 2262 Petr. Tech., Sept. 1947)By R. D. Lee
A simplification of the method of Hurst and McCarty for conducting potentiometric model studies by the single probe method is presented along with experimentally determined invasion patterns for certa
Jan 1, 1948
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Powder Metallurgy - Some Factors Affecting Particle Size of Hydrogen-reduced Tungsten Powder (Metals Tech., Oct. 1946, T.P. 2100)By Bernard Kopelman
The particle size of tungsten metal powder used to make tungsten wire for use in radio tubes and incandescent lamps must be closely controlled if the highly desirable feature of nonsagging is to be ac
Jan 1, 1947
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Powder Metallurgy - Some Factors Affecting Particle Size of Hydrogen-reduced Tungsten Powder (Metals Tech., Oct. 1946, T.P. 2100)By Bernard Kopelman
The particle size of tungsten metal powder used to make tungsten wire for use in radio tubes and incandescent lamps must be closely controlled if the highly desirable feature of nonsagging is to be ac
Jan 1, 1947
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Minerals Beneficiation - Heavy Liquid Recovery Systems in Mineral BeneficiationBy E. C. Tveter, R. B. Tippin
The separation of minerals by heavy liquids is a standard laboratory technique which goes back at least 50 years, but commercially economic application of this principal to ore concenfration has been
Jan 1, 1969
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Minerals Beneficiation - Flocculation-Key to More Economical Solid-Liquid SeparationBy R. H. Oliver
The purposes, types, preparation, and testing of flocculants are discussed. A flocculation compendium is included, indicating choice of flocculant for a given set of conditions. An economic evaluation
Jan 1, 1961
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Review of Developments at Kettleman HillsBy R. E. Collom
VARIOUS chapters already written in the history of development of the North Dome of Kettleman Hills are monotonously identical in the one underlying theme of conservation of oil and gas. Discovered on
Jan 1, 1937
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Review Of Theoretical Metallurgy During 1934By Robert F. Mehl
METALLURGISTS are properly interested in papers dealing with subjects ranging from the theories of the metallic state to very practical details on the use of metals. A review of theoretical metallurgy
Jan 1, 1935
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Part XII - Papers - Twinning and Some Associated Diffraction Effects in Cubic and Hexagonal Metals: II- Double DiffractionBy C. M. Wayman, R. Bullough
The selection rules fir twinning in fcc, bcc, and hcp lattices as established in Part I are used to predict the positions, relative to the matrix (untwinned) reciprocal lattice, of reflections due to
Jan 1, 1967
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Reservoir Engineering- Laboratory Research - Waterflood Pressure Pulsing for Fractured ReservoirsBy D. L. Archer, W. W. Owens
Conventional waterflooding often is uneconomic in highly fractured reservoirs because of the gross bypassing of the reservoir oil by injected water. Imbibition and pressure pulse flooding have been us
Jan 1, 1967
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PART VI - Papers - The Effect of Aluminum Additions to Cr-Fe Coatings on the Properties of the Diffusion CoatingsBy J. J. Demo
The effect of aluminum additions on the coating vale and corrosion resistance of Cr-Fe diffusiou coalings on a mild steel substvate has been studied. Aluminum additions up to 2 wt pct increase the chr
Jan 1, 1968
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Lattice Relationships In Decomposition Of Austenite To Pearlite, Bainite, And MartensiteBy R. F. Mehl, G. V. Smith
THE decomposition of austenite in steels, because of its immense practical importance, has been subjected to extensive study in recent years from the point of view of the mechanism of the process.1-3
Jan 1, 1942
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New York Paper - A Method for Distinguishing Sulphides from Oxides in the Metallography of Steel (with Discussion)By George F. Comstock
It seems a common opinion among metallographists that all light-gray inclusions seen with the microscope in polished sections of steel are manganese sulphide. Examples of this belief are continually a
Jan 1, 1917
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California Paper - The Mines and Mill of the Atacama Mineral Company, Ltd., Taltal, ChileBy Sidney H. Loram
As the work carried on by this Company, of which the writer has been in charge for the past two years, is somewhat unique, the following account of it may be of interest, and, on that account, is offe
Jan 1, 1900
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Chicago Paper - Summary of American Improvements and Inventions in Ore-Crashing and Concentration, and in the Metallurgy of Copper, Lead, Gold, Silver, Nickel, Aluminum, Zinc, Mercury, Antimony and Tin (See Discussion, p. 647)By James Douglas
American metallurgical inventions have not always been absolute metallurgical improvements, if accurate work be the standard of comparison; but when we review the new methods and machinery which have
Jan 1, 1894