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Institute of Metals Division - An Internal Friction Study of Low -Carbon Iron-Nickel-Carbon AlloysBy P. G. Winchell, J. K. Jackson
The strtcture of body-centered Fe-Ni-C alloys (0 to 16.5 wt pct Ni) containing less than 0.015 wt pct C was investigated by measuring the carbon-diffusion peak at low frequencies with a torsion pendul
Jan 1, 1964
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Cleveland Paper - Surveying and Sampling Diamond Drill HolesBy E. E. White
In August, 1911, I read a paper before the Lake Superior Mining Institute1 on surveying and sampling diamond-drill holes. The present paper gives a more thorough descriptiou of these methods, together
Jan 1, 1913
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Coal - Economics of PegmatitesBy Paul A. Taylor
MUCH information concerning pegmatites which was thought to be true a few years ago has been proved false, and what is now actually known about some pegmatites is not true of many others. The erratic
Jan 1, 1954
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Papers - Refining - Fire Refining - Review of Work on Gases in Copper (With Discussion)By O. W. Ellis
Before entering upon a general discussion of the fascinating, but at present rather controversial, subject of gases in copper, the author feels that some attention should be directed to the work which
Jan 1, 1934
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U. S. Army Gas ServiceBy executive order of the President, dated June 25, 1918, the investigation of matters relating to gas warfare, which had been initiated by the Director of the U. S. Bureau of Mines early in 1917, and
Jan 9, 1918
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas in the Rocky Mountain District in 1941By C. E. Shoenfelt
Jan 1, 1942
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas in the Rocky Mountain District in 1941By C. E. Shoenfelt
Jan 1, 1942
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A Mine, A Smelter, And A RailroadBy Robert Glass Cleland
BECAUSE of the country's vast mineral resources, Alexander Von Humboldt, the great German scientist who visited Mexico, or the Kingdom of New Spain, a hundred and fifty years ago, very aptly call
Jan 1, 1952
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Adsorption Rate Studies – Chalcopyrite-Xanthate SystemBy T. V. Subrahmanyam, A. P. Rao
The adsorption behavior of chalcopyrite has been studied at different xanthate concentrations and flow rates in a column apparatus with potassium ethyl xanthate as the collector. Based upon the experi
Jan 1, 1983
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The New Cement Plant Of The Universal Atlas Cement Company At Northampton, PennsylvaniaBy L. G. Sprague
THE fact that this latest and most modern of the Universal Atlas Cement Company's plants at Northampton, Pa., is the fifth to be built on these same properties, and their development has been coi
Jan 1, 1943
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Part IV – April 1968 - Papers - Deformation Mechanisms in Titanium and Titanium- Aluminum AlloysBy K. R. Evans
The deformation mechanisms occurring in polycrys-talline, commercially pure titanium and a Ti-8 pct A1 alloy have been investigated and compared to earlier results by Levine on high-purity titanium si
Jan 1, 1969
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Properties Of Cerium-Containing Magnesium Alloys At Room And Elevated TemperaturesBy J. P. Murphy, T. E. Leontis
DURING the last few years, the trend in the aircraft and automotive industries has been toward higher and higher operating engine temperatures. This has created considerable interest in the effect of
Jan 1, 1946
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Philadelphia Paper - Pillars of CoalBy S. Harries Daddow
IN order to get an idea as to the strength of steel rails, it will be well to review the tests to which iron rails have been subjected. In England, Mr. Ashcroft found that the best 80 pound rails bro
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Communications - Correlation Between Excess Entropy and Enthalpy FunctionsBy Claude H. P. Lupis, John F. Elliott
QUITE generally an increase in the temperature tends to bring a system closer to ideality. It is reasonable as a first approximation to consider that the excess free energy will vary linearly with the
Jan 1, 1967
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The Present Radium SituationBy R. B. Moore
IN 1914 the writer and K. L. Kithil announced, through Bulletin 70 of the U. S. Bureau of Mines, that the United States possessed the largest deposits of radium-bearing ore in the world. At that time
Jan 1, 1930
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Chattanooga Paper - The New Mining Code of MexicoBy Richard E. Chism
If internal commotion can be called life, the Mexicans have certainly lived more in the last seventy-five years than any other people. To the oppression of the Spanish viceroys succeeded the sanguinar
Jan 1, 1886
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Where Does the Mine Dollar Go?By Paul M. Tyler
DOES mining pay? Inasmuch as the whining of minerals from Nature is one of the world's principal sources of new wealth, this question is of general economic interest but it is obviously of even m
Jan 1, 1934
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Professional Divisions (d2814ec8-9356-477f-a07b-c391979477b4)W. M. PEIRCE, Chairman J. L. CHRISTIE, Past-chairman E. H. DIX, JR., Vice-chairman ALBERT J. PHILLIPS, Vice-chairman E. M. WISE, Secretary International Nickel Co., Bayonne, N. J. W. M. CORSE, T
Jan 1, 1934
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New York Paper - The Iron Deposits of Daiquiri, Cuba (with Discussion)By Waldemar Lindgren, Clyde P. Ross
To the miner, as well as to the geologist, the eastern part of Cuba is a most interesting region. Here we find, in contrast to the moderate relief predominating elsewhere in the island, an imposing mo
Jan 1, 1916
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Free Energy of Vaporization of Metals from 0° to 2000°CBy J. W. Evans
ONE of the most important and frequent calculations that the extractive metallurgist is called upon to make is that of the standard free energy change of a reaction (?F°). For many reactions of metall
Jan 1, 1954