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Metallurgy Of Secondary Tin And LeadBy Gustave E. Behr
The peculiar and changing conditions of a wartime market and the necessary governmental restrictions have resulted in an accumulation of a large amount of certain secondary metals in the tin-lead allo
Jan 1, 1943
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Faster Calculation of Plane Triangulation Systems by Calculating Machine and Semigraphical MethodsBy Richard Hamburger
Calculating machines permit the use of the more rapid cotangent and semigraphic solutions of plane triangulation. The results of these methods are as accurate as those of other methods. Simple adjustm
Jan 2, 1950
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COALBy Price E. R.
The coal industry was beset with work stoppages and strikes throughout the year, and there was some loss in markets to oil and gas. These conditions, along with the mild decline in industrial activity
Jan 1, 1950
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Relation Of By-Product Coke Ovens To The Natural Gas Supply Of The Pittsburgh District (57ae9049-56d9-46a4-8f81-d3b2a94d686b)By Harold Rose
THE peak of production from the Appalachian natural gas field was apparently reached about 10 years ago, and the annual production from Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Ohio has now dropped to about tw
Jan 10, 1926
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Present Practices in the Computer Control of Copper Flotation Plants (41e04d5f-9e10-446e-8d78-b9e6cdbb7b94)By E. V. Manlapig, David J. Spottiswood
In recent years great advances in the automatic control of flotation plants have been made, mainly due to the development of reliable sensing instruments to monitor process performance and the develop
Jan 1, 1981
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Productivity Improvement in Large Stripping MachinesBy Tom Learmont
The emergence of the dragline as the dominant stripping tool is described and reasons for this are noted. Brief comparisons are made with stripping shovels and wheel excavators. Representative output
Jan 1, 1976
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Institute of Metals Division - Creep Properties of Commercially Pure TitaniumBy M. J. Sinnott, W. R. Kiessel
The creep characteristics of commercially pure titanium sheet in the annealed state, cold-worked state, and cold-worked and recovered state in the temperature range from 75' to 750°F have been de
Jan 1, 1954
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Papers - Lead - Blast-furnace Practice at the Bunker Hill SmelterBy H. E. Lee, P. C. Feddersen
Blast-fuRnace operation at the Bunker Hill smelter deviates somewhat from common practice. Under existing conditions it is economical to operate the furnaces at "forced" capacity. The furnace feed con
Jan 1, 1937
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Autogenous Grinding From Test Work To Purchase Of A Commercial UnitBy Robert R. Turner, Arthur R. MacPherson
This chapter reviews the steps which should be taken from the time it is decided to consider autogenous grinding in the development of a new ore deposit or the expansion of an existing plant up until
Jan 1, 1978
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Papers - Diffusions that Take Place in Iron-silicon Alloys during Heat Treatment (With Discussion)By N. A. Zeigler
Considerable work has been and is being done on the changes of physical properties that take place in alloys at elevated temperatures, and much information on this subject is published. Much less is k
Jan 1, 1934
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Milling Methods At New Cornelia (1c6925e0-bc4b-4244-b6b1-671510db7bcb)By L. M. Barker
THE New Cornelia Branch of the Phelps Dodge Corporation is at Ajo, Pima County, Ariz. It is at the southern terminus of the Tucson, Cornelia and Gila Bend Railroad, which connects with the Southern Pa
Jan 1, 1939
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Bleaching ClayBy A. D. Rich
THE term "bleaching clay" or "bleaching earth," as used in the oil industries, refers to clays that in their natural state, or after chemical or physical activation, have the capacity for adsorbing co
Jan 1, 1949
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The Ore Knob Copper Mine And Some Related DepositsBy T. Sterry Hunt
THIS remarkable mine, to which attention has lately been drawn, is situated not far from the New River, in Ashe County, North Carolina, on a spur of the Blue Ridge which lies between the main crest of
Jan 1, 1874
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Iron Ore Developments Surge in West AfricaBy Christer Danielsson, Sven Ivarsson
In 1951 the first ton of iron was shipped from West Africa; ten years later the total export exceeded 4 million tons, and an optimistic forecast for 1970 indicates a production capacity of something a
Jan 3, 1963
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Cleveland Paper - Sampling Ores without Use of MachineryBy William Glenn
The taking of proper samples of crude ores seems to he less thoroughly understood, or less carefully practiced, than its impor tance requires. We all know how often we encounter the reports of very ac
Jan 1, 1892
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Kennecott Process For Treating Copper Smelter Flue DustsBy W. Joseph Schlitt, Kenneth J. Richards, John D. Prater
Kennecott Minerals Company has developed a leach-hydrolysis route for treating flue dusts from copper smelters The flue dusts are acid leached in an oxygen atmosphere to solubilize copper and fix the
Jan 1, 1981
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Papers - Geophysics Education - Geophysics Education and Exploratory Geophysics as a Career (T. P. 950)By Donald C. Barton
Geophysical methods of prospecting taken as a whole do not seem to offer much promise to a young man planning to enter them in the future. They have come to stay, to be sure, and they will continue in
Jan 1, 1940
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Papers - Geophysics Education - Geophysics Education and Exploratory Geophysics as a Career (T. P. 950)By Donald C. Barton
Geophysical methods of prospecting taken as a whole do not seem to offer much promise to a young man planning to enter them in the future. They have come to stay, to be sure, and they will continue in
Jan 1, 1940
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Reservoir Engineering Equipment - A Linear Programming Model for Scheduling Crude Oil ProductionBy J. S. Aronofsky, A. S. Lee
Results and experimental procedures are presented covering a preliminary laboratory investigation of the compaction of reservoir rocks and its effect on porosity and permeability. "Egective" compre
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Structural Steels and Light-weight Metals in the Transportation IndustryBy Horace Knerr
The term. "high-yield-strength," used in the title of Dr. Gillett's paper (p. 40) is obviously relative. His discussion is limited to improved steels intended to compete with the low-cost, low-ca
Jan 1, 1936