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Theory And Accuracy In Optical Pyrometry With Particular Reference To The Disappearing-Filament TypeBy W. E. Forsythe
WHEN measuring ordinary temperatures, the instrument is generally placed in very close contact with the body the temperature of which is desired. However, if the temperature of the source is continual
Jan 9, 1919
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Institute of Metals Division - Nucleation of Dislocation Loops by Cracks in CrystalsBy J. J. Gilman
IT is well established that dislocations exist in crystals and account for crystal plasticity.' However, the origins of the dislocations are not clear. Among the means by which dislocations might
Jan 1, 1958
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Off-Highway Trucks in the Mining IndustryBy Alan K. Burton
An industry-wide demand for bigger and more efficient trucks, with their supposed economies of scale, is well established. Some trucks have been, and often are brought "off the shelf," with the manufa
Jan 8, 1975
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Rock Bolting Finds Wide ApplicationBy Edward Thomas
ROCK bolting, third great change in postwar underground mining, is inseparably tied to the other two changes: better drilling and mechanized mining. Mechanized mining provided the impetus, when conven
Jan 11, 1954
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The Herculaneum Lead Smelter Of St. Joe Minerals Corporation, Herculaneum, MissouriBy Donald H. Beilstein
The St. Joe Minerals Corporation Lead Smelter and Refinery have been in continuous operation at Herculaneum, Missouri since 1892 as the Herculaneum Lead Smelting Division. Over the years, the plant ha
Jan 1, 1970
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Diesel Engines Versus Steam Turbines For Mine Power PlantsBy Herbert Haas
GEORGE W. HAWKINS, Tucson, Ariz. (communication to the Secretary*).-The paper by Mr. Haas will no doubt be followed with considerable interest, as it covers the power-plant problem in quite a comprehe
Jan 12, 1916
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Mining Engineering Notebook – Cage to Hoisting Engineer – Emergency CommunicationBy W. A. Boyer, A. W. Beck
At the Morning mine of American Smelting & Refining Co. it was particularly important that there be a means of signaling the engineer from the moving cage in the shaft. Because of the shifting ground
Sep 1, 1955
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New York Paper - The Vein-System of the Standard Mine, Bodie, Cal.By R. Gilman Brown
Mines are interesting by reason of what they have done for man, or of what has been done for them by nature. Not all are interesting on both scores. Many profitable mines are commonplace to the geolog
Jan 1, 1908
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Ottawa Paper - The Treatment of Fine Gold in the band; of snake River, IdahoBy Thos Egleston
The sands of Snake River, Idaho, have long been known to contain gold. They were worked by some of the first prospectors who came to Idaho, and on the banks still stand the ruins of camps abandoned fo
Jan 1, 1890
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Relationship of Fault Displacement to Gouge and Breccia ThicknessBy E. C. Robertson
Observations of faults in mines, at outcrops, and in the laboratory lead to the conclusion that the displacement d of a fault increases irregularly but monotonically with the thickness t of its associ
Jan 1, 1984
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Subsidence - A Real Or Imaginary Problem?By August E. Vandale
Mining of the Freeport and Pittsburgh coal seams in the Pittsburgh vicinity dates back more than 100 years, and Consolidation Coal Co., or its predecessor, Pittsburgh Coal Co., has been actively minin
Jan 9, 1967
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Emissions from Tall Stacks Contribute Very Little to Ground Level Sulfur DioxideBy C. A. Kroetz, A. J. O’Neal
The Long Island Lighting Co. has operated an extensive monitoring system for over three years. Nearly 900,000 separate pieces of information have been recorded for a land area of some 600 sq miles, 15
Jan 1, 1973
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Microseismic Activity Associated with Longwall Coal Mining (c358bd13-dd66-47a2-868a-2f894415e1bb)By H. Reginald Hardy, Gary L. Mowrey
Field studies were conducted over a longwall coal mining operation to investigate the feasibility of using microseismic techniques to detect and to locate any areas of instability in the vicinity of t
Jan 1, 1980
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Tin Mining by Primitive Methods in Bolivia - Costs Were Cut and a Social Problem Solved in a Way That No Efficiency Engineer Could Possibly CondoneBy R. S. Handy
AT THE TIME of my first visit to Bolivia in 1927 the tin-mining industry was prosperous, the tin price at London being more than £300 per long ton of tin, and the operators were making every effort to
Jan 1, 1938
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Board Of DirectorsMeeting of Jan. 23, 1914.-The President reported the appointment of Arthur S. Dwight and E. Gybbon Spilsbury as tellers to canvass the votes for the Annual Election of Directors. The President report
Jan 2, 1914
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TV at TCIClosed-circuit television was first installed under- ground by United States Steel's Tenessee Coal & Iron Division during the summer of 1957. Placed at a rotary dump location in one of TCI's
Jan 3, 1961
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Continental Reviews Three Phases Of Uranium MiningBy M. H. Brady, J. G. Roscoe
Continental No. 1 This mine in Lisbon Valley has an orebody about 1200 ft long and varying from 250 to 70 ft wide. Average width is about 100 ft and stope heights average about 9 ft. It was developed
Jan 7, 1958
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Recovery of Beryllium from a Low-Grade Ore by Sulfur TrioxideBy Raymond Dugdale, Fathi Habashi
There has been a recent interest in studying the action of anhydrous sulfur trioxide on ores to convert the metal values into a water-soluble form as a substitute for leaching by sulfuric acid. For ex
Jan 1, 1973
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Volumetric Behavior of IsobutaneBy W. M. Morris
THE volumetric behavior of isobutane at temperatures below its critical temperature has been studied by several investigators. Seibert and Burrell1 measured the vapor pressure of isobutane from the ic
Jan 1, 1939
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Kalium Chemicals To Use Solution Mining Technique To Recover Saskatchewan PotashSolution mining got back in the news recently when Kalium Chemicals, Ltd., a joint subsidiary of Pittsburgh Plate Glass and Armour & Co. announced its plans to go full speed ahead in mining potash by
Jan 6, 1964