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Transportation Of Suspended Solids In Pipe Lines
By Warren E. Wilson
THE transportation of solids in pipe lines is a matter of deep concern in many fields of engineering. Much experimental and theoretical work has been done in an effort to devise means of designing pip
Jan 1, 1945
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Self-Diffusion of Copper in Molten Copper
By Ling Yang, John Henderson
Self-diffusion coefficients of copper in molten copper have been measured by the capillary reservoir method in the temperature range 1140o to 1260°C. The results can be represented by the equation D
Jan 1, 1962
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Philadelphia Paper - The Importance of Surveying in Geology
By Benjamin Smith Lyman
THE importance of topography to geology is so commonly underrated as to deserve to be pointed out again and again. The relation of topography to the different branches of geology may be seen best by a
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The Development and Use of High-Speed Tool Steel
By J. M. GLEDHILL
(Washington Meeting, May, 1905.) A Discussion of Mr. J. M. Gledhill's paper, read by title at the Lake Superior meeting, but presented first at the New Yolk meeting of the Iron and Steel Institu
Mar 1, 1905
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Adaptation Of Elastic-Wave Exploration To Unconsolidated Structures
By Frank Rieber
THE study of earthquakes long ago developed the fact that by studying the travel times of the various groups of waves from the same earthquake, as received on seismographs at varying distances, major
Jan 1, 1928
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Lake Superior Paper - Biographical Notice of Sir Clement Le Neve Foster
By T. A. Rickard
Clement Le Neve Foster was born at Camberwell on March 23, 1841, his father being Peter Le Neve Foster, who was secretary of the Society of Arts for 26 years. As a boy of 12 he was sent to school at B
Jan 1, 1905
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The 4 W’s of Fuel Cells – Who-What-Where-When
By Ernst M. Cohn
The demonstrations of the "Silent Sentry" by Union Carbide Corp. in 1957 and of a special tractor-plow by Allis-Chalmers in 1959 ushered in the technology era of fuel cells. The idea for direct conver
Jan 9, 1964
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Chemical Industry
By Robert B. Fulton
The use of industrial minerals by the chemical industry as raw materials for manufacturing and in processing spans a wide assortment of minerals. This chapter aims to supplement rather than duplicate
Jan 1, 1975
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The Condensation Of Fume And The Neutralization Of Furnace-Gases.
By F. T. Havard
(Canal Zone meeting, November, 1910.) I. INTRODUCTION. THE present truce in litigation between Western smelting and ranching interests gives opportunity for a summary of the results achieved by meta
Aug 1, 1910
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Philadelphia Paper - The Advance in Mining and Metallurgical Art, Science and Industry Since 1875
By William P. Shinn
Jan 1, 1881
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Minerals Beneficiation - Mechanism of Intergranular Comminution by Heating
By A. M. Gaudin, J. H. Brown
In a survey of the effects of heat treatment on the comminution of various rocks, it was found that unusual size distributions often characterize the broken products, and that this is related to a gre
Jan 1, 1961
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Minerals Beneficiation in 1962
In 1962, minerals beneficiation showed definite signs of coming out of the doldrums into which it has drifted after the uranium boom. Demand by steelmakers for high-grade iron pellets has created
Jan 2, 1963
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Producing – Equipment, Methods and Materials - New Concepts in Sucker-Pod Pump Design
By R. J. Watson, A. H. Juch
About half a million sucker-rod pumps are installed in oil wells in the U. S. alone. In Venezuela, too, the system is widely used; some 5,000, or 90 percent, of Cia. Shell de Venezuela's wells pr
Jan 1, 1970
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Groveland Plant Features Huge Pelletizing Machine
The pellet plant, built by Dravo Corp, in Groveland, Mich., for the Hanna Mining Co., is now in full operation. Although using jasper, a type of iron ore with low iron content (approximately 28% Fe),
Jan 4, 1964
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Coal - Faults in Pitching Coal Seams - Their Effect on Mining
By A. M. Keenan, R. H. Carpenter
Geologic faults have always been a plague to the mining industry, and have often reduced a mining venture from a profitable to a marginal operation, and even at times have forced companies to liquidat
Jan 1, 1961
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Papers - Theoretical - Flow of Heat from an Intrusive Body into Country Rock (T. P. 1677, with discussion)
By C. E. Van Orstrand
An intrusive body is a mass of igneous rock that has migrated upward, presumably from great depths. Great variations in form, composition and depth of burial occur. It is not proposed in this paper to
Jan 1, 1946
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Papers - Theoretical - Flow of Heat from an Intrusive Body into Country Rock (T. P. 1677, with discussion)
By C. E. Van Orstrand
An intrusive body is a mass of igneous rock that has migrated upward, presumably from great depths. Great variations in form, composition and depth of burial occur. It is not proposed in this paper to
Jan 1, 1946
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The Advance in Mining And Metallurgical Art, Science, and Industry Since 1875.*
By William P. Shinn
IT seems proper to present in the Transactions of the Institute, from time to time, formal record of the advances made in the arts and sciences to which our organization is devoted-milestones in the h
Jan 1, 1881
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Index (240e6e0a-3566-4b36-b9d6-27f0245c725b)
Jan 1, 1963
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Coal - Surface Subsidence Associated with Longwall Mining
By W. C. McClain
The amount of vertical subsidence occurring over a longwall operation is a function of the thickness of material removed, the quantity and quality of any fill material, the width of the extraction, an
Jan 1, 1967