Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Papers - - Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in Tennessee in 1935By Walter F. Pond, Kendall E. Born
Production of crude oil in Tennessee during 1935 approximated 20,000 bbl., an increase of about 5000 bbl. over 1934. The total production for the state is an estimate, since the only definite figures
Jan 1, 1936
-
Papers - - Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in Tennessee in 1935By Kendall E. Born, Walter F. Pond
Production of crude oil in Tennessee during 1935 approximated 20,000 bbl., an increase of about 5000 bbl. over 1934. The total production for the state is an estimate, since the only definite figures
Jan 1, 1936
-
Silicon: Its Applications in Modern MetallurgyBy A. B. Kinzel
SILICON and its metallurgical uses have been the subject of speculation since the earliest days of modern civilization. The early philosophers, Theophrastus and Pliny, believed that silica was a speci
Jan 1, 1933
-
Potential, Charge And Ion Mobility Studies On Oxide SurfacesBy M. P. Sidorova, D. A. Fridrikhsherg
The surface charge, electrokinetic potential and surface conductance were studied for silica, alumina and rutile as the functions of PH and concentration of 1-1 electrolyte solutions. The adsorption p
Jan 1, 1980
-
Municipal Waste Water Utilization for Froth Flotation of Copper OresBy Walter W. Fisher, Samuel Rudy
Secondary treated sewage effluent was substituted for normal process water in laboratory tests simulating froth flotation recovery of copper and molybdenum sulfides. Sewage effluent caused significant
Jan 1, 1979
-
Boston Meeting Sets a StandardTHE Boston meeting, August 29-31, was in many ways one of the pleasantest the Institute has enjoyed in years. Much hard work had been done by the committee, and with excellent results. The program had
Jan 1, 1928
-
Rock In The Box - To Know You Is To Love YouBy John F. Abel
Personal gain seems to be the most powerful incentive to economic progress. One of my first exposures to this phenomenon was the comparison between company stopes and leaser's stopes in a vein go
Jan 1, 1970
-
Producing-Equipment, Methods and Materials - Salt Cement for Shale and Bentonitic Sands (missig pages)By K. A. Slagle, D. K. Smith
weight obtained. Additives used in conjunction with salt in these slurries have included silica flour, calcium ligno-sulfonate and cellulose retarders, granular lost-circulation materials, bentonite a
-
Mining A Steeply Dipping Coal Seam in the United States By LonwallBy David W. Wisecarver, James F. Reynolds
INTRODUCTION The Department of Energy is cooperating with Snowmass Coal Company near Carbondale, Colorado to introduce the longwall mining method in moderate to steeply pitching coal seams in the
Jan 1, 1982
-
Suggestions to Institute Authors (d72ff74a-cdf1-4ffd-b21a-343081007f5a)The primary purpose of the Institute is to advance the technologic and engineering arts embraced by it through interchange of knowledge This can best be done by the presentation and discussion of tech
Jan 1, 1952
-
Dragline Dredges - a New Way to Mine Placer GoldBy Merrill, Charles White
MOST extraordinary of the technical developments in placer gold mining during the last five years has been the rise of the dragline dredge, by which is meant a floating washing plant for auriferous gr
Jan 1, 1938
-
William A. Haven, Chairman, Iron and Steel DivisionBy AIME AIME
THIS year the Chairman of the Institute's Iron and Steel Division is THIS William Anderson Haven, better known to the membership generally as Bill Haven. The Division Chairman is an individual en
Jan 1, 1944
-
Electrostatic Concentration Or Separation Of Ores.By Henry A. Wentworth
(New York Meeting, February, 1912.) ELECTROSTATIC separation of ores in its present form is generally known as the Huff' process from the name of Charley H. Huff, of Boston, Mass., through whose
Jun 1, 1912
-
Proposed Tariff on CopperBy E. E. AGGER, Arthur Notman
THE proposal has been made in a bill introduced into Congress at the last session by Representative Jones of Michigan that an import duty of 6 c. per lb. shall be placed on copper. This action is urge
Jan 1, 1925
-
Institute of Metals Division - Some Devices for Quantitative MetallographyBy C. S. Smith
QUANTITATIVE methods were used to good effect in the earliest days of metallography1-3 but they mysteriously passed into virtual disuse until the important paper4 by Howard and Cohen in 1947. Various
Jan 1, 1961
-
Meeting the Challenge of Material Demands From the OceansBy C. Richard Tinsley, Ta M. Li
Accelerated development of the deep-ocean and continental margin resources may be the ultimate answer to meet rapidly increasing material demands to the year 2000. The mineral-rich oceans that have be
Jan 4, 1975
-
Foreword by Lincoln F. Elkins, PresidentJan 1, 1966
-
Sublevel Caving Techniques Optimize Kiirunavaara ProductionBy R. Malmstrom, H. Heden, K. Likin
Sublevel caving techniques at Luossavaara-Kiirunavaara AB (LKAB) in Sweden have undergone significant modification over the years as management strives to maintain mine viability amidst rising costs a
Jan 10, 1979
-
Metal Consumption in Hammer Mills at Norris DamBy Francisco Cadena
THE construction of Norris Dam, built by the Tennessee Valley Authority on the Clinch River, a tributary of the Tennessee River, involved the production of coarse and fine aggregate for approximately
Jan 1, 1937
-
Geophysics and Geochemistry - Distribution of Zinc in Soils Overlying the Flat Gap Mine (MINING ENGINEERING, 1962, vol. 14, No. 10, p.56)By A. D. Hoagland
The Flat Gap mine is located on Copper Ridge in the Appalachian Valley of East Tennessee. Large zinc orebodies occupy zones of solution and collapse breccias in Lower Ordovician Kingsport limestone an
Jan 1, 1962