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Production - Texas - Oil and Gas Development in West Virginia during 1943By David B. Reger
Sharp declines of initial production of both oil and gas occurred in West Virginia during 1943. There was only a small decrease in the number of ncw wells, but these wells did not show the quantities
Jan 1, 1944
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Chattanooga Paper - The Ilsede Hütte Iron-Mines at Peine, GermanyBy Lucius W. Mayer
The iron-mines of the Ilsede Hutte Co. are at a town called Peine, about 20 miles east of the city of Hanover, on the railroad to Brunswick (Braunschweig). Hanover, the capital of the province, is a m
Jan 1, 1909
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Kerr On Sensitive Soils And QuickclaysBy Ian J. Smalley
"Quickclay is an extreme case, it is by far the most mobile of all the common solid materials on the earth's surface. It has both a high water content and a mineral texture that allows it to flow
Jan 1, 1985
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Brakes for the Mineral IndustryBy George Smith
IN discussing present-day business and industrial troubles we easily drop into the habit of clinical diagnosis. Talk of this kind, with its emphasis on suspicious symptoms and abnormal tendencies, mak
Jan 8, 1928
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Philadelphia Paper - Steel for BridgesBy John W. Cloud
In 1877 the Pennsylvania Railroad Company removed an old bridge from its line at Duncannon, Pa., built intermediate piers and erected shorter spans of the Pratt truss type, which had previously been i
Jan 1, 1881
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Preparing Men For Mining's FutureBy E. Just
The mining industry is guaranteed an important future because its products are indispensable. However, this can be anything from a brilliant, efficient, profitable future to one of being a heavy-hande
Jan 9, 1961
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Local Section Officers for 1966Jan 1, 1967
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Local Section Officers for 1969Jan 1, 1970
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Crushed Limestone Aggregates for ConcreteBy Katherine Mather
This paper is an attempt to put together petrographic, physical, and chemical data about the large and varied group of rocks generally called limestones. Results of the properties of these rocks on th
Jan 10, 1953
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Local Section Officers for 1968Jan 1, 1969
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Conditioning Surfaces For Froth FlotationBy Oliver C. Ralston, James E. Norman
SEPARATION of minerals by froth flotation is rightly called an art. It can truthfully be said that no two ores separate in the same way. The difference in results obtained when natural and synthetic m
Jan 1, 1939
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Skip Hoisting For Coal MinesBy Andrews Allen
THE large increase in the wages of mine workers makes it imperative that all factors tending to limit production per miner be eliminated, if possible. The trolley and storage-battery locomotive, minin
Jan 2, 1921
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Activation of Sphalerite for FlotationBy Oliver Ralston
DURING experimental study on the separation of a zinc concentrate from the heavy sulfide ores of Jerome, Ariz., a great deal of attention has been given to proper activation of the sphalerite content
Jan 1, 1929
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Staggering Locations for Oil WellsBy Roswell Johnson
THE prevailing system of wells on a rectangular basis, as shown in Fig. 1-A, has developed because of the exigencies of offsetting at boundary lines. When, however, a very large tract is, being drille
Jan 8, 1918
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Dredging Coal for Victoria PowerBeyond the industrial suburbs of Melbourne to the southeast are brown coal deposits just under the fertile soil of the Latrobe Valley. These deposits rank as one of the wonders of the world. The manne
Jan 10, 1964
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Nuclear Detector For Beryllium MineralsBy T. Cantwell, N. C. Rasmussen, H. E. Hawkes
Beryl is a mineral that may be difficult to distinguish from quartz by casual field inspection. The easily recognized green color and hexagonal crystal form of coarse-grained beryl are by no means uni
Jan 9, 1959
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Local Section Officers for 1964Jan 1, 1965
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