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Papers - Hog Mountain Gold District, Alabama (With Discussion)By C. F. Park
Hog Mountain is in the north central part of Tallapoosa County, Alabama, about 13 miles northeast from Alexander City. The Hog Mountain Mining and Milling Co. controls 1658 acres of land and is the on
Jan 1, 1935
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The British Columbia Batholith and Related Ore DepositsBy Philip Wilson
THE Province of British Columbia covers 382,000 sq. mi., about 250,000 sq. mi. of which have not been prospected. In fact, the coast country and the islands are so heavily timbered and the surface cov
Jan 8, 1922
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Papers - Economics - Competitive Relation of Coal and Petroleum in the United States (With Discussion)By August J. Breitenstein, W. Spencer Hutchinson
The outstanding engineering accomplishment of the last three decades has been the development and application of more and cheaper power and its use instead of the labor of men and animals. Substitutio
Jan 1, 1934
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Papers - Smelting - Converting Practice - Development of Copper Converting at Butte and AnacondaBy William Kelly, Frederick Laist
The slow, tedious and costly method of reducing copper matte to metallic copper in the reverberatory furnace, commonly known as the Welsh process, was displaced by the rapid and inexpensive converter
Jan 1, 1934
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Institute of Metals Division - Annealing Textures in High-Purity SilverBy Hsun Hu
The formation of annealing textures in high-purity silver, from the various rolling textures obtanled in the course of texture transition, was studied. It was found that from a brass-type rolling text
Jan 1, 1962
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Lake Superior Paper - The Occurrence of Pebbles, Concretions and Conglomerate in Metalliferous VeinsBy Edward Halse
The occasional occurrence in metalliferous veins of rounded fragments of rock, matrix or ore, lying loose, embedded in clay, or enclosed in some kind of cement, may be attributed to four causes:— I.
Jan 1, 1906
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Geological Distribution Of The Useful Metals In The United StatesBy S. F. Emmons
THE first paper which appears in the published Transactions of our Institute is that read by our respected Secretary at its first meeting in Wilkes-Barre, in May, 1871. It is entitled The Geological D
Jan 1, 1913
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New York Paper - Modern Views of the Chemistry of Coals of Different Ranks as Conglomerates (with Discussion)By J. D. Davis, A. C. Fieldner
The older coal chemist had a much simpler conception of coal than we have today. To him coal was a mineral composed essentially of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, ash, and water, in variou
Jan 1, 1925
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California Paper - The Characteristics and Conditions of the Technical Progress of the Nineteenth Century (Presidential Address at San Francisco)By James Douglas
At this last meeting of our Institute for the year 1899, it is appropriate that we should look back at the past. To review the century's progress in the exact sciences and the resulting arts t
Jan 1, 1900
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Relative Triaxial Deformation RatesBy William M. Baldwin, T. S. Howald, A. W. Ross
EXPLORATORY WORK THE related subjects of preferred orientation, directionality in physical properties, and earing tendencies of wrought metal [ ] strip have attracted the attention of metallurgis
Jan 1, 1945
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Canada’s New Uranium Camp at Blind RiverBy Howard Steven Strouth
The Blind River mining camp in Canada is all set to stage a major revolution. Enthusiasts on the scene say it will bring large-scale mining to North American uranium operation. If orebodies already di
Jan 5, 1955
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Prepositions And Preposition - VerbsThe function of a preposition is to show the relation of one thing to another; it is necessary therefore for the writer to select the preposition that indicates the particular relation, otherwise he w
Jan 1, 1931
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Reservoir Gas and Oil in the Vicinity of Cleveland, OhioBy Frank Van Horn
IT is customary to ascribe two general modes of occurrence to natural gas, namely shale. gas which, as the name indicates, is found in' shale, and reservoir gas, which occurs ill sandstone, congl
Jan 1, 1917
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Reactions In The Solid State, I - Initial Course Of Subcritical Isothermal Diffusion Reactions In Austenite In An Alloy SteelBy Howard A. Smith
OF late considerable experimental and theoretical interest has been shown in the rates of transformation from a single phase, usually a supercooled solid solution, into one or more phases. Such reacti
Jan 1, 1935
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Milling and Concentration - Effect of Cyanogen Compounds on the Floatability of Pure Sulfide Minerals.-IIBy R. E. Head, E. L. Tucker
Previous investigations of E. L. Tucker and R. E. Head' related in particular to the effect of cyanogen compounds on galena, sphalerite, and pyrite, and their behavior in the presence of such com
Jan 1, 1926
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Pit Limit Slope Design – General Comments, Data Collection, Remedial Stability MeasuresBy Ben L. Seegmiller
Introduction The profitability of an open pit operation depends to a large extent on the use of the steepest pit slopes possible, provided they do not fail during the life of the mine Optimum pit slop
Jan 1, 1979
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Minerals Beneficiation - Temperature and Humidity in Electrical Separation of Oxide MineralsBy J. H. Anderson, G. A. Parks, B. K. Jindal
Both temperature and humidity are important variables in electrical separations. By independent control of temperature and water vapor pressure, it is shown that charge depends primarily upon relative
Jan 1, 1967
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Recent Advances In High Gradient Magnetic SeparationBy John A. Oberteuffer, Ionel Wechsler
High gradient magnetic separation, first introduced in 1968 as a means for the removal of very fine magnetic contaminants from clay, is no longer a new technology. Applications to a number of solid-so
Jan 1, 1980
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Salt Lake Paper - Precipitation of Copper from Solution at AnacondaBy F. F. Frick, Frederick Laist
In a leaching process, having obtained the copper in solution, the choice of the precipitation method is influenced by the following factors: 1. Availability of precipitant. 2. Adaptability to t
Jan 1, 1915
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Institute of Metals Division - Crack Propagation in the Hydrogen-Induced Brittle Fracture of SteelBy A. R. Troiano, W. J. Barnett
IN recent years the demands of space limitations and increased loads, particularly in the aircraft industry, have accelerated the trend toward utilization of ultra-high strength steels. The increased
Jan 1, 1958