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Taconites Beyond TaconitesBy N. M. Levine
WHETHER the United States and its allies can W meet the challenge of a war brought by the Communists will depend largely on who wins the battle of steel production. At the present stage of the world s
Jan 1, 1952
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PART IV - Communications - Application of a Viscosity Technique to Liquidus Determinations inBy Donald Ofte
LIQUIDUS temperatures of molten alloys were measured in an oscillating-cup viscosimeter by observing the abrupt increase in the alloy viscosity when the apparatus was cooled below the alloy liquidus t
Jan 1, 1967
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Coal - Stream Pollution by Coal Mine WastesBy Henry F. Hebley
This paper brings within the compass of one comparatively brief article a general description of the situation concerning the nation's water resources. It touches upon the phenomenal growth in th
Jan 1, 1954
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The Engineering Foundation (1549ab59-1196-4a5a-8bad-26bbc41a0902)The members of the Institute will recall the account given in the March Bulletin of the inauguration exercises of the Engineering Foundation which was inhibited by an initial gift of $200,000 by Mr. A
Jan 12, 1915
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Education - Past Progress of Mineral Industry Education (Mining Tech., Nov. 1947, TP 2264)By L. E. Young
The progress of mineral industry education will be limited to the period prior to World War II and will be considered as primarily a division of engineering education. Its relation to progress in the
Jan 1, 1949
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History of CoalBy Samuel M. Cassidy
The exact date of man's first use of coal is lost in antiquity. The discovery that certain black rock would burn was undoubtedly accidental and probably occurred independently and many times in t
Jan 1, 1981
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Planning Subsidence Monitoring Programs over Longwall PanelsBy Julianne H. Glarmaty, Peter J. Conroy
INTRODUCTION In 1970 the percentage of underground coal extraction by longwall mining methods in the U.S. was 2.1 percent. This figure rose to 4.4 percent in 1976 and is expected to rise to 12 per
Jan 1, 1982
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Bureau of Mines Health and Safety ResearchBy Robert L. Marovelli
A recent reorganization placed the health and safety research activities of the Bureau of Mines under a director, Division of Minerals Health and Safety Technology. The new health and safety research
Jan 11, 1979
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Technical Notes - Conditioning of Pacific Ocean Water for Waterflood InjectionBy C. F. Knutson, Martin Felsenthal, J. D. Lung, J. D. Sudbury
This paper has been written to summarize the laboratory and field studies leading to injection of Pacific Ocean water into the Third Grubb formation. Laboratory tests for studying the permeabilitie
Jan 1, 1957
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New Units Of Crusher Capacity And Crusher EfficiencyBy Arthur F. Taggart
Tins paper proposes two units (believed to be new) for designating, respectively, capacity and efficiency for primary and intermediate crushers. CAPACITY Operators know that the tonnage of rock
Jan 1, 1941
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The Coal Fields Of Montana.*By Eugene Stebinger
INTRODUCTION. A LARGE number of papers and reports dealing with the coalfields of Montana have been published + during the last 30 years, but the information is much scattered, appearing in many tech
Jan 9, 1913
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The Magnetic Concentration of Low-Grade Iron Ores (e6fed46a-e2b9-40cf-90b8-a0788c4b26d4)By S. Norton
GEORGE C. FOOTS, Port Henry, N. Y. (written discussion).-The paper by Mr. Norton and Mr. LeFevre will bear the most careful consideration by all interested in the iron business, particularly in the Ea
Jan 4, 1917
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Sculptor Molds A Mountain With Mining TechniquesBy Henry A. Pohs
It is a rare work of art that attains the proportions of a major construction project. One instance of such a phenomenon is Bartholdi's Miss Liberty, which was designed and built section by secti
Jan 11, 1966
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St. Louis Paper - The Tredinnick-Pattinson ProcessBy William E. Newman
When Hugh Lee Pattinson discovered, in 1829, that the crystals formed during the slow cooling of molten lead were poorer, and the remaining liquid richer in silver, than the original lead, an importan
Jan 1, 1918
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Institute of Metals Division - Influence of Modulus on the Temperature Dependence of the Activation Energy for Creep at High TemperaturesBy Craig R. Barrett, Alan J. Ardell, Oleg D. Sherby
It is shown that the apparent activation energy for creep of pure poly crystalline metals increases with increasing temperature in the temperature range 0.5 to 1.0 of the absolute melting temperature.
Jan 1, 1964
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The Near Surface Tunnel In A Gravitating Medium: State Of StressBy Hans M. Ewoldsen
The generation and evaluation of solutions to body force problems is of extreme interest to the geotechnical profession, as all natural stress states must necessarily include some contribution from th
Jan 1, 1972
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Geophysics Education - A Geophysics Option in a Comprehensive Earth-science Curriculum (T. P. 1381)By H. Landsberg
The curriculum presented here is an outgrowth of discussions by the Committee on Geophysics Courses of the A.I.M.E. in previous years. It had to be a compromise between the desires voiced by employers
Jan 1, 1946
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Geophysics Education - A Geophysics Option in a Comprehensive Earth-science Curriculum (T. P. 1381)By H. Landsberg
The curriculum presented here is an outgrowth of discussions by the Committee on Geophysics Courses of the A.I.M.E. in previous years. It had to be a compromise between the desires voiced by employers
Jan 1, 1946
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Papers - Diffusion of Carbon from Steel into Iron (T. P. 843, with discussion)By Leonard C. Grimshaw
Diffusion of carbon from gases into iron has been the object of much research, because of its long recognized importance in carburizing processes, but the direct diffusion of carbon from steel into ir
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Diffusion of Carbon from Steel into Iron (T. P. 843, with discussion)By Leonard C. Grimshaw
Diffusion of carbon from gases into iron has been the object of much research, because of its long recognized importance in carburizing processes, but the direct diffusion of carbon from steel into ir
Jan 1, 1938