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Public Financing As A Source Of Funding For The Canadian Mineral IndustryBy Brian J. Gorval, Robert L. Kemeny
INTRODUCTION Financing, or providing adequate capital at low cost for developing and bringing a natural resource property into production, is a fundamental requirement for profitable operation. Und
Jan 1, 1985
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Coal - Bituminous Coal ElectrokineticsBy S. C. Sun, John A. L. Campbell
The surface properties exhibited by bituminous coal and bituminous coal lithotypes were ascertained by using streaming potential techniques. The electro kinetic prop-erties wereascertainederties of bi
Jan 1, 1971
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Index (9aca5094-e56e-4ebf-b3a6-08f4efcdcad0)Jan 1, 1907
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Chemical Basis of Techniques for the Decomposition and Removal of CyanidesBy D. E. Hyatt
Many flotation plants practicing pyrite depression, mills leaching gold and silver ores, blast furnace facilities, and many metal plating shops share at least one common waste-water constituent of par
Jan 1, 1977
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Sintering Limonitic Iron Ores at Ironton, MinnesotaBy Perry Harrison
THE mixing of fine ores with fuel and burning under induced draft is called sintering in iron-ore practice and either sintering or roasting in copper and lead metallurgy. The first development of sin
Jan 1, 1930
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Calculated Thermal Effects of Use of Oxygenated AirBy C. S. Witherell
THE first feature that strikes one when considering the use of air enriched with oxygen in pyrochemical processes is the conservation of Enriched Air FIG. 1.-TEMPERATURES THEORETICALLY OBTAINABLE
Jan 11, 1924
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Production Technology - Some Properties of Mixed Paraffinic and Olefinic HydratesBy F. T. Selleck, H. H. Reamer, B. H. Sage
An experimental investigation was made of the effect of temperature upon the three-phase pressure associated with the propane-water and propene-water systems when hydrates were present. In addition, t
Jan 1, 1952
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Use Of The Geiger-Müller Counter In The Search For Pitchblende-Bearing Veins At Great Bear Lake, CanadaBy G. Carman Ridland
IN conjunction with a geological investigation of the silver-bearing veins at Contact Lake, Northwest Territories, Canada, a survey was made with a Geiger-Müller counter of the gamma-ray emissions fro
Jan 1, 1944
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Part IX – September 1969 – Papers - The Relationship Between Compounds of Sodium and Sulfur and SulfidationBy N. S. Bornstein, M. A. DeCrescente
ThE nickel and cobalt base superalloys employed in gas turbine engines under some conditions' oxidize at an accelerated rate when exposed at elevated temperatures to atmospheres containing minor
Jan 1, 1970
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Buffalo Paper - The Superficial Alteration of Western Australian Ore-DepositsBy Herbert C. Hoover
While the importance of the superficial alteration of golddeposits is recognized in pure science, it seems often to be singularly disregarded among engineers in practice. Its great practical bearing l
Jan 1, 1899
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Technical Note - Sphalerite Flotation With Guanidine Compounds And Derivatives As CollectorsBy Pierre R. Hines
Diphenyl guanidine is used as an accelerator in vulcanizing rubber. Other rubber accelerators are also flotation collectors, e.g., dithiocarbamate, thiazole, and the xanthates. Urea and its derivati
Jan 2, 1959
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Electrical Fume Precipitation at GarfieldBy W. H. Howard
As the result of a series of analyses and volume determinations of gases discharged from the converters at the Garfield Smelting Co.'s. smelter at Garfield, Utah, it was found that a considerable
Jan 8, 1914
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Sintering Practice at Josephtown SmelterBy Karl F. Peterson, H. K. Najarian, Robert E. Lund
PRIMARY products of the Josephtown smelter are zinc metal of various grades, lead-free zinc oxide pigments, cadmium metal, and sulphuric acid. Zinc concentrates of domestic and foreign origin are blen
Jan 1, 1952
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Coal and Coke Utilization as It Affects US Trade Relations (or the Expanded Role of Coal in World Trade)By W. W. Mason
The US began exporting coal in the late 1800s, at first in very small quantities to Canada and, beginning in 1897 and 1898, to the east coast of South America. Shipments to European countries began on
Jan 1, 1982
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Buffalo Paper - Notes on the Roasting of the Hudson River CarbonatesBy Ingersoll Olmsted
These ores are of two classes, Bessemer and non-Bessemer, existing in separate, though adjoining, beds. Both are carbonates, with small admixtures of oxides and other combinations. To prepare them
Jan 1, 1889
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Phosphate and Potash Feature Nonmetallic SessionBy AIME AIME
LEADING off the Thursday morning session on Non-metallics was C. E. Heinrichs' paper, "Phosphate Flotation, Its Place in the Technology and Economics of the Phosphate Industry." Mr. Heinrichs als
Jan 1, 1933
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Subsidence from MiningBy Henry Louis
IN the discussion on the paper on subsidence by R. V. Norris and H. W. Montz (Teohnical Publication No. 153), H. N. Eavenson has been good enough to quote some of my views regarding the phenomena of s
Jan 1, 1929
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Institute of Metals Division - The Aging Characteristics of the Ti-13V-11Cr-4A1 AlloyBy J. M. Dupouy, R. A. Rawe, M. B. Bever
The aging characteristics of a titanium alloy containing 13 pct V, I1 pct Cr, and 4 pct A1 have been investigated by hardness measurements, X-ray diffraction, and metallography. The P phase decomposes
Jan 1, 1961
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Chromium Alloys?IIBy Frederick M. Becket
AFTER all the chronology that has been given, what is the present status of chromium steels? For the purpose of this discussion the different types of chromium steels can be divided into three classif
Jan 1, 1929
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Bridgeport Paper - The Mines of the Chalanches, FranceBy T. A. Rickard
In southeastern France, among the magnificent alpine masses of the Dauphine, there is a group of celebrated mines of silver-, nickel- and cobalt-ores, the deposits of which present many features
Jan 1, 1895