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Officers for the year ending 1907By AIME AIME
Council.* PRESIDENT OF THE COUNCIL. ROBERT W. HUNT CHICAGO, ILL. (Term expires February, 1907.) VICE-PRESIDENTS OF THE COUNCIL. WILLIAM P. BLAKE TUCSON, ARIZ. THOMAS F. COLE DULUTH, MINN. IR
Nov 1, 1906
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Possibilities in the Wet Treatment of Copper Concentrates. DiscussionBy Lawrence Addicks
F. N. FLYNN, Clifton, Ariz.-As a number-of my associates in Arizona know, for a great many years, I have felt that leaching was one of the coming problems. We are about to start experiments at Clifton
Jan 12, 1916
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Mineral DressingBy Charles E. Locke
DEPRESSION in all lines of the mineral industry except gold, which began in 1930 and continued, even worse, through 1931, had its effect on ore concentration. Construction was limited to the completio
Jan 1, 1932
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Mining and Metallurgy - Iron and Steel MetallurgyBy Clyde E. Williams, V. N. Krivobok, C. H. Herty
THE extreme effect of the depression on the steel industry is well illustrated by the fact that the amount of iron ore shipped from the Lake Superior district was the lowest in 47 years. Something ove
Jan 1, 1933
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An Interpretation of the So-called Paraffin Dirt of the Gulf Coast Oil Fields ? DiscussionW. E. WRATHER, Wichita Falls, Tex. (written discussion*).-The appearance of Mr. Brokaw?s with-the chemical composition of "paraffin dirt" will be welcomed by oil geologists who have worked in the Gulf
Jan 7, 1918
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Coal - Specific Safety Problems Applicable in West Virginia MinesBy Arch J. Alexander
This paper is a resume of a study undertaken by the West Virginia Department of Mines. The underlying and direct causes of accidents are determined in each occupational group. Then from this stu
Jan 1, 1951
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Coal - Specific Safety Problems Applicable in West Virginia MinesBy Arch J. Alexander
This paper is a resume of a study undertaken by the West Virginia Department of Mines. The underlying and direct causes of accidents are determined in each occupational group. Then from this stu
Jan 1, 1951
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Papers - Electrical Methods - Interpretation of Three-layer Resistivity CurvesBy Sylvain J. Pirson
The question of the interpretation of apparent resistivity curves is still a much disputed subject although the discussion has been going on for several years, mainly since Gish and Rooneyl made their
Jan 1, 1934
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Mincon Employs Pelletizer to Beneficiate Beryllium OreToday's largest producer of domestic beryllium oxide, Mineral Concentrates & Chemical Co., Inc., has recently disclosed the basic outline of its unique process of beneficiating beryllium ores to
Jan 10, 1961
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Rock In The Box - The Personal Side Of NationalizationBy Bruce A. Kennedy
Lufthansa flight 497 roared down the runway and climbed rapidly through the early morning mist hanging over Pudahuel airport and the city of Santiago, Chile, into the brilliant sunlight above the clou
Jan 1, 1971
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Economics of a Four-cycle Miller CompressorBy Don Coulter
OBSERVATIONS were made over a period of seventeen months to ascertain the economic value of a four-cycle Miller engine direct-connected to a Watts compressor, to determine whether this type of engine
Jan 8, 1928
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Preserve the Cornish Pump - Huge Engines, Some Used in England Even Now, a Monument to the ingenuity of the Cornish MinersBy James T. Kemp
AN historical society of particular interest to mining engineers all over the world was born in Cornwall in 1935. A hundred-year-old winding engine then finished its long labors at the Levant mine on
Jan 1, 1947
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Prebolting System at Renton Mine Cuts Overcast Construction TimeBy John L. Walte
Consolidation Coal Co.'s Renton mine, a 680 000-t/y (750,000-stpy) underground operation located in western Pennsylvania, has reduced the time required for overcast construction in its advancing
Jan 6, 1978
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Corrections - Some Problems in the Allocation of Exploration EffortBy A. Weiss, W. A. Coster
Jan 1, 1964
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Production and Use of Rare Metals - Fundamental research on so-called "rare" metals is urged to provide knowledge stockpile for future use.By W. J., Kroll
MOST people believe that rare metals are always, scarce in nature, expensive to make, and therefore useless despite some miraculous properties which might make them a cure-all. There are' some me
Jan 1, 1946
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Technical Notes - An Improved Blotter Model for Analog StudiesBy C. A. Fothergill
An improved blotter model is described which makes use of a plastic sheet as base for the blotter field and pins to represent the input wells. The model is simple to construct and adapt and is particu
Jan 1, 1958
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Subsurface Reflection Profiling Using Ground- Probing Radar (91756d3f-01f4-4940-82d3-1893cb9a35cd)By James C. Fowler
The use of ground-probing radar as a reflection mapping tool is gaining acceptance in subsurface investigations. This tool may be used to obtain near-surface information useful to geotechnical enginee
Jan 1, 1982
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Wilkes-Barre Paper - Note upon the Cost of Iron Rails as made in 1866 in a leading English Railway Company’s Rolling MillBy P. Barnes
The tabular statement accompanying this note shows the money cost in each of the three departments of manufacture, of 17 leading items, and also the proportion (expressed in a clecimal fraction) which
Jan 1, 1879
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Dip ChartDiscussion of the paper of HOWLAND BANCROFT, presented at the Salt Lake meeting, August, 1914, and printed in Bulletin No. 91, July, 1914, pp. 1767 to 1769. THEODORE SIMONS, Butte, Mont. (communicati
Jan 12, 1914