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Coal UtilizationBy Chester N. Truax
Still another shadow was cast over coal's largest market-the electric utilities-when President Johnson signed into law the Federal Clean Air Act of 1967. Air pollution-sulfur reduction-was thus b
Jan 2, 1968
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Rock In The Box Mining And Exploration Division - Adult Students Need Adult ResponsibilitiesBy John F. Abel
"The most conservative persons I ever met are college undergraduates." Woodrow Wilson said that in 1905. No one is saying anything like it today. Chaos on the campus was a cliche of the sixties. Sinc
Jan 1, 1970
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Replacement Of Capital EquipmentBy Henry J. Schwellenbach
Lack of a system in scheduling the replacement of capital equipment can result in emergency purchases of units which may later be found unsuitable for the job. New York Trap Rock Corp., which produces
Jan 10, 1959
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Hoover, the EngineerBy C. F. Kelley
IT is no new experience for the distinguished subject of this presentation to be the recipient of honors conferred, to be eulogized for successful accomplish-ment, or to hear expressed with sincerity
Jan 3, 1928
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Errata (69a39e48-2d5a-4db2-a3f0-55e5583a6960)The following list of corrections has been compiled from the thirty-five volumes, with some additions: VOLUME I. Page 160. The first two sentences of the second paragraph should read as follows
Jan 1, 1907
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Bridgeport Paper - Magnesia and Sulphur in Blast-Furnace Cinder (see Discussion, p. 889)By Frank Firmstone
In the Kaernthner Zeitschrift, No. 2, 1881, p. 53, et seq., Prof. Ledebur details some experiments on the power of various silicates of lime and alumina, magnesia and alumina, and lime, magnesia and a
Jan 1, 1895
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Impact of the Common Market on the Major Nonferrous MetalsBy J. S. Smart
The six countries which make up the European Economic Community-Belgium, France, German Federal Republic, Italy, Luxembourg and The Netherlands-are populated by about 170 million consumers. Their econ
Jan 6, 1963
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Nuclear Detector For Beryllium MineralsBy T. Cantwell, N. C. Rasmussen, H. E. Hawkes
Beryl is a mineral that may be difficult to distinguish from quartz by casual field inspection. The easily recognized green color and hexagonal crystal form of coarse-grained beryl are by no means uni
Jan 9, 1959
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Sketches of the New Mining District at Sullivan, MaineBy C. W. Kempton
IF New England were located in some distant and almost inaccessible region, there is no doubt that its mineral resources would have been ere this well developed and generally acknowledged, but laborin
Jan 1, 1879
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Cyaniding Clayey Ore at the Buckhorn Gold MineBy Paul Cook
THE ore deposit of the Buckhorn Mines Co., Buckhorn, Nev., is peculiar in being a shallow kaolinized mass of material with basalt walls, and having apparently no direct connection with any of the usua
Jan 9, 1916
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Chlorination Process for the Recovery of Copper from ChalcopyriteBy G. L. Hundley, R. E. Mussler, D. H. Yee, F. E. Block, R. S. Olsen
An anhydrous chlorination process for the recovery of copper from chalcopyrite was investigated. Pelletized concentrate was reacted continuously with gaseous chlorine in a vertical shaft reactor at 55
Jan 1, 1974
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Quarry Waste in the Indiana Limestone DistrictBy J. B. Newsom
IN the Indiana limestone district, some 50 or 60 per, cent of the merchantable stone in a quarry opening is waste, and only about 40 or 50 per cent of the stone from the opening is finally sold. So lo
Jan 1, 1932
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Zinc in Northeastern Washington-A ReviewBy A. E. Weissenborn
Current knowledge of the substantial resources of zinc that exist in northwestern Washington is reviewed. These zinc-lead deposits are all associated with the Kootenay Arc, a narrow arcuate belt of fo
Jan 1, 1976
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The Brown Coals Of Utah And Adjoining TerritoriesBy H. Engelmann
THE very extensive development of a brown coal formation, in the region of the Rocky Mountains, is well known to all of you. The existence of these coals was known years ago, but they were of no pract
Jan 1, 1876
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Hydrolytic Stripping Of Versatic Acid Solutions Containing Iron And Other MetalsBy F. M. Doyle-Garner, A. J. Monhemius
Hydrolytic stripping is the process whereby metal ions in a loaded solvent extractant are hydrolyzed by water, typically at 130°C to 200°C (265°F to 392°F). Equilibrium hydrolytic stripping tests were
Jan 1, 1986
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Washington Paper - The Brown Coals of Utah and Adjoining TerritoriesBy H. Engelmann
The very extensive development of a brown coal formation, in the region of the Rocky Mountains, is well known to all of yon. The existence of these coals was known years ago, but they were of no pract
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Phase Changes in 3.5 Per Cent Nickel Steel in the Ac1 RegionBy I. N. Zavarine
THE observations presented in this paper were recorded during a study of the spheroidizing process. Spheroidization of cementite in steel is either brought about to develop a set of desirable mechani
Jan 1, 1939
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The Silver-Cerium SystemBy I. Stapf
Systematic investigations on silver-rare earth metal systems have been extended on the Ag-Ce system in order to clarify the discrepancies reported in literature. The phase diagram has been reinvestiga
Jan 1, 1984
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Washington Paper - What Steel IsBy Frederick Prime
At the last meeting of the Institute, Mr. A. L. Holley read a paper on "Steel," in which he proposes for it a definition so opposed to the one generally received, as to call for some remarks. Until wi
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Relation Of Magnetic Susceptibility To Mineral CompositionBy David R. Mitchell, Ernest M. Spokes
INFORMATION on magnetic properties of minerals other than magnetite is scanty and some- times erroneous. Often there is no information at all. W. R. Crane's table of tractive forces published in
Jan 3, 1958