Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
The Precipitation Of Copper From The Mine Waters Of The Butte District. (24299f9b-ed3f-4d9f-887d-fc17251902e5)By J. C. Febles
HISTORY. THE use of iron for the precipitation of copper was known at least as early as the fifteenth century. Both Paracelsus and Basil Valentine refer to it in their writings, as early as 1500 A. D
Jan 7, 1913
-
Salt Lake Paper - Mining Methods at the Copper Queen MinesBy Joseph P. Hodgson
In 1880, mining operations were commenced at the Copper Queen mine. The famous Queen ore body, which extended to the surface, was first quarried from a large open cut in the outcrop. The ore body was
Jan 1, 1915
-
Papers - Lead - Blast-furnace Practice at Midvale, UtahBy Galen H. Clevenger
Equipment for treating lead ores was added in 1905 to a copper plant which the United States Smelting Refining and Mining Co. had built in 1902 at Midvale, Utah, about 12 miles to the south of Salt La
Jan 1, 1937
-
Lake Superior Paper - An Automatic Stock-Line Recorder for Iron Blast-FurnacesBy J. E. Johnson
OF the many items of information necessary to the successful management of the blast-furnace, few are more important than knowledge of the location and movement of the stock: line:—whether the furnace
Jan 1, 1906
-
Electro-Metallurgical Industries As Possible Consumers Of Electric PowerBy Dorsey Lyon
I. INTRODUCTION THE utilization of hydro-electric power in electro-metallurgical indus¬tries, aside from purely mechanical operations, may he of two kinds. The electric energy may be used to supply t
Jan 8, 1915
-
Oil Development In Oklahoma During 1924By R. S. McFarland
OKLAHOMA, in 1924, recorded the largest single increase of any state; the total oil production for the year being 176,206,397 bbl. (Oil & Gas Jnl.), which gives an increase over 1923 of about 9 per ce
Jan 3, 1925
-
Albany Paper - The Box Electric Rock-DrillBy Frank E. Shepard
Electric power in mining-operations is now successfully applied to haulage, hoisting, lighting and pumping; and until lately, drilling was the one department of mining in which an electric source of e
Jan 1, 1904
-
Detroit Paper - Condition of Thorium in Thoriated Tungsten Filament (with Discussion)By Ancel St. John
At the New York meeting of the Institute of Metals Division in February, 1927, Jeffries and Tarasov presented a paper on Tungsten and Thoria,' in which the experimental facts were interpreted in
-
Iron and Steel Division - Activities in the Liquid Solution SiO2-CaO-MgO-Ai2O3 at 1600?By Richard H. Rein, John Chipman
The activity of SiO2, in the entire liquid system SiO2-CaO-Mg0-A12O3 at 1600°C is calculated from the distribution of silicon between these slags and Fe-Si-C alloys saturated with either graphite or s
Jan 1, 1965
-
San Francisco Paper - Lead Smelting at El PasoBy H. F. Easter
The lead department of the El Paso Smelting Works at El Paso, Tex., is operated strictly on a custom basis. The ores treated are drawn from the surrounding territory, comprising New Mexico, Arizona, w
Jan 1, 1916
-
Papers - Classification - Reactivity of Anthracite with Carbon Dioxide (With Discussion)By G. S. Scott, H. G. Turner, W. L. Kleene
It is well known that different forms of carbon show differences in chemical behavior under apparently identical conditions. It is fairly well known that these differences persist, although to a lesse
Jan 1, 1934
-
Institute of Metals Division - Viscosity and Density of Liquid Lead-Tin and Antimony-Cadmium AlloysBy A. Phillips, H. J. Fisher
The influence of temperature and composition on the viscosity of high-purity liquid metals and alloys of the Pb-Sn and Sb-Cd systems was investigated by the logarithmic-decrement method. The variation
Jan 1, 1955
-
Papers - Magnetic Methods - A Magnetic Gradiometer (With Discussion)By Irwin Roman, Thomas C. Serman
It has been known for many years that when a wire is moved in a magnetic field, an electromotive force is developed which is proportional to the rate at which the wire is moved in a direction perpendi
Jan 1, 1934
-
Atlantic City Paper - Kalgoorlie, Western Australia, and its Surroundings (Discussion, 808)By George J. Bancroft
Western Australia (often popularly called Westralia) comprises all of the Australian continent west of the 129th meridian. The latest census, that of 1895, gives it a population of 101,235 persons. It
Jan 1, 1899
-
Part I – January 1968 - Papers - Superplasticity of Unalloyed Beta PlutoniumBy S. D. Dahlgren
The plasticity of unalloyed P plutonium was studied by evaluating the strain-rate-hardening exponent, m, in the equation Values of m up to 0.33 and tensile elongations up to 680 pct were obtained
Jan 1, 1969
-
New York Paper - Relation of Bonuses and Costs to Present-day Prices of Crude and its Products (with Discussion)By Thomas Cox
The following compilations are made from a series of investigations and are used to present the subject in an unbiased manner, as the writer does not represent any company or financial interest. Th
Jan 1, 1923
-
Gas Transportation - Design of High-pressure Gas Pipe LinesBy Ralph E. Davis, Lyon F. Terry
The rapid expansion of the natural gas industry in this country during the past three or four years has necessitated the construction of a number of long and comparatively large diameter high-pressure
Jan 1, 1929
-
Chicago Paper - Irvine Oil District, KentuckyBy Stuart St. Clair
In view of the great interest shown in the oil possibilities of Kentucky, one is impressed with the paucity of reliable literature on the oil fields of the state. A few brief reports by the Federal an
Jan 1, 1921
-
Canadian Potash DevelopmentsWith one shaft almost completed and another shaft being sunk, the scope of the Saskatchewan potash area is beginning to come into focus. Some 18 companies have reportedly leased more than four million
Jan 5, 1958
-
New York Paper February, 1918 - Review of the Coal Situation of the World (with Discussion)By G. S. Rice
With so tremendous a subject, an attempted review of the coal situation of the world in a short talk must necessarily be of a sketchy character. It is hardly necessary to tell a body of engineers that
Jan 1, 1918