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Coming EventsApr. 9, AIME, Chicago Section, Chicago Bar Assn., 29 S. La Salle St., Chicago. Apr. 11-12, Geological Society of America, Cordilleran Section, annual meeting, University of Arizona, Tucson. Apr.
Jan 1, 1952
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Research - Some Theoretical Aspects of Well Drainage and Economic Ultimate Recovery (TP 2201, Petr. Tech., May 1947, with discussion)By Vaughn Moyer
A method for incorporating well drawdown effect into reservoir calculations is presented in detail, together with examples of its use for widely divergent conditions that could be normally encountered
Jan 1, 1948
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Research - Some Theoretical Aspects of Well Drainage and Economic Ultimate Recovery (TP 2201, Petr. Tech., May 1947, with discussion)By Vaughn Moyer
A method for incorporating well drawdown effect into reservoir calculations is presented in detail, together with examples of its use for widely divergent conditions that could be normally encountered
Jan 1, 1948
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Some Problems of TodayBy Thomas A. Edison
We have not yet begun. to realize the possibilities of automatic machinery, in part because we have not developed the designing brains, and in part because we have not sufficiently simplified industry
Jan 1, 1929
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Report Of The Committee On Papers And Publications For 1916During the year 1915 the Committee received 161 manuscripts, which were treated as follows: 3 accepted for. New York Meeting (110th) . 64 accepted for San Francisco Meeting (111th) 49 accepted fo
Jan 2, 1916
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Relation of Sulpher to the Overpoling of Copper ? DiscussionPHILIP L. GILL, New York, N. Y. (written discussion*).There is one feature of the fire-refining of electrolytic copper which I believe should be mentioned when the relation of oxygen content to the "p
Jan 8, 1918
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Analysis of Mineral Industries Education in the Western HemisphereBy Edward Steidle
THAT veterans are crowding the colleges is no longer news; 78 per cent of the 1916-47 enrollment in mineral industries curricula in the United States were veterans, but the rapid comeback from an esti
Jan 1, 1948
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Stabilization - Stabilizing the Oil BusinessBy Amos L. Beaty
The oil industry can prosper only if crude production is not excessive. This is true for several reasons. In the first place, the marketing branch of the business is so highly competitive that ther
Jan 1, 1932
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Lake Superior Paper - The Fullers' Earth of South DakotaBy Heinrich Ries
Fullers' earth is a clay-like substance, which has the property of decolorizing or clarifying oils. An ultimate chemical analysis shows it to differ from most ordinary clays in having usually a h
Jan 1, 1898
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Part IV – April 1968 - Communications - Discussion of "A Model for Concentrated Interstitial Solid Solutions; Its Application to Solutions of Carbon in Gamma Iron"*By H. I. Aaronson, W. L. Winterbottom, G. M. Pound
On the basis of a statistical thermodynamic treatment of the data of smithz2 on the activity of carbon in austenite, a Darken and smith23 deduced that the interaction energy, wy, between carbon atoms
Jan 1, 1969
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Reservoir Engineering - General - Pressure Distributions in Rectangular ReservoirsBy R. C. Earlougher, F. G. Miller, T. D. Mueller, H. J. Ramey
There are many studies of flow in radial systems that can be used to interpret unsteady rerervoir flow problems. Although solutions for systems of infinite extent can be used to generate solutions fu
Jan 1, 1969
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Recent Technical Developments in the Non-metallic Mineral IndustriesBy Oliver Bowles
TO keep pace with technical progress is an important function of any industry. All branches of mining may learn important lessons by observing progress made in other branches. The non-metallic mineral
Jan 1, 1931
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Iron and Steel Division - The Reduction of Silica in Blast-Furnace Slag-Metal SystemsBy John F. Elliott, John R. Rawling
The rate of reduction of silica to silicon by carbon at 1550° to 1700°C in iron blast-furnace type slag-metal systems has been investigated. In the tower portion of the temperature range oxygen transp
Jan 1, 1965
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Membership (2f687585-028e-4ea7-8bda-023dc42fd9aa)NEW MEMBERS The following list comprises the names of those persons who became members during the period Dec. 10, 1918, to Jan. 10, 1919. ADAMS, W. W., Mine Supt., Cia. Minera Paloma y Cabrillas,
Jan 2, 1919
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Part II - Papers - Diffusion of Oxygen and Nitrogen in Liquid IronBy Klaus Schwerdtfeger
The rules of solution of oxygen from H2O-H2-He gas and of nitrogen from N2-H2 gas in shallow melts of liquid iron were measured at 1610o and 1600o C, respectiuely. Concentration profiles were detemine
Jan 1, 1968
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Coal - Crushing ofAnthracite for Reductionof Domestic to Steam SizesBy P. D. Rao, H. B. Charmbury, D. R. Mitchell
As a result of a changing market pattern for anthracite, there is now an increasing demand for steam size and a decreasing demand for domestic sizes. To help the producer meet this new demand, the aut
Jan 1, 1961
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Comminution - Wet Grinding of Ferrosilicon for Heavy Media (Mining Tech., March 1948, TP 2350)By E. H. Crabtree, T. C. King
The ferrosilicon grinding unit at the Central Mill of the Eagle-Picher Mining & Smelting Co. near Picher, Okla., was completed in March 1947. The object of the plant was to grind pigs of ferrosilicon,
Jan 1, 1949
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Relative importance of abrasion and corrosion in-metal loss in ball milling (745475d5-07e4-452e-bbc1-975d6aaa4c0d)By D. J. Dunn, J. L. Huiatt, T. E. Norman
Corrosion studies in laboratory ball mills and grinding environment simulations produce corrision rates and total metal removal rates much lower than those recorded in operating production ball mills.
Jan 1, 1986
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New York Paper - The Manufacture of Sorne Foreign Rails (with Discussion)By C. W. Gennet
Announcement was made in the spring of 1926 that the Boston & Maine R. R. Co. had contracted with the well-known German steelmakers, Messrs. Fried Krupp, for the manufacture of 15,000 tons of basic op
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Petroleum Production – United States - Texas-Louisiana Gulf Coast Operations during 1928By J. M. Vetter, W. F. Bowman
The Gulf Coast area of Texas and Louisiana produced a total of 47,070,650 bbl. of oil during 1928, a decrease of 7,401,173 bbl. from the previous year. Of this amount Texas produced 39,353,950 bbl., o
Jan 1, 1929