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Problems of American Railroads Early in 1936By J. J. Pelley
NOT being a scientist, an engineer or a metallurgist, I consider it a very great honor indeed to be asked to address the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers. Your program indicate
Jan 1, 1936
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Papers - Testing and Calculation - Selectivity Index; a Yardstick of the Segregation Accomplished by Concentrating OperationsBy A. M. Guadin
Direct quantitative comparison of the results of concentrating operations on different ores is frequently desired but almost impossible to obtain if comparison has to be made by means of two quantitie
Jan 1, 1930
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Mental Factors In Industrial OrganizationBy Thomas Read
READJUSTMENT Of the industrial world to a peace .basis after more than 4 years of war will involve many fundamental and far-reaching changes that cannot as yet he clearly foreseen or definitely provid
Jan 2, 1919
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Papers - Classification - Classification from the Standpoint of the By-product Coke Industry (With Discussion)By W. H. Blauvelt
The only way in which the difficult problems of classification of coal for the manufacture of by-product coke can be solved is to analyze them by the use of scientific data. It is very easy to adop
Jan 1, 1930
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Papers - Zinc - Manufacture of Silicon Carbide RetortsBy E. J. Bruderlin
A metallurgical process to be economically successful must be carried on under proper conditions of control and equipment. The question of equipment is always of primary importance. In the distillatio
Jan 1, 1937
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Mud Volcanoes Of Colombia, South AmericaBy Stanley Herold
A FEW notes on the occurrence and significance of mud volcanoes in Colombia may be of interest at the present time, owing to the renewed activity in geological exploration of, the coastal regions bord
Jan 7, 1919
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Reward of Loyalty and LaborBy Charles Schwab
WHEN I leave this life, as an employer of labor there is no one thing that I want so much to be engraven upon my monument as the fact that I have been one of the men who have worked, whether with my b
Jan 12, 1922
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Technical Notes - Stepped Austenitizing Treatment for 4340 SteelBy E. P. Klier, Volker Weiss, George Sachs
IT has been shown that the isothermal transformation of austenite in a special steel can be modified by isothermal holding in the high subcritical transformation range.' Since this treatment pote
Jan 1, 1958
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Unit Operation of Oil Pool - Cooperation between Engineers and LawyersBy Peter Q. Nyce
Law is as old as civilization. In its early stages the so-called law of the jungle, "the survival of the fittest," was entirely operative. Man was quite largely a law unto himself and was likewise his
Jan 1, 1931
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The Theory of Stratification and Its Application In Ore-DressingBy Byron Bird
WHILE Mr. Fahrenwald has been working on the fundamentals of ore-dressing, in Idaho, the Northwest Experiment Station of the U. S. Bureau of Mines, in cooperation with the University of Washington, ha
Jan 3, 1927
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A Small Experimental Flotation CellBy Geoffrey Purcell
For anyone contemplating flotation research with only a very limited amount of mineral available for testing, the choice of suitable experimental equipment is by no means obvious. Hallimond's ori
Jan 11, 1965
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Nominations For Officers And DirectorsThe Committee on Nominations begs to submit the following names as its nominees for the respective offices indicated: For President, SIDNEY J. JENNINGS, New York. For Vice-Presidents. C. W. GOODALE,
Jan 1, 1917
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Colorado Paper - Fireproofing Mine Shafts of the Anaconda Copper Mining Co.By E. M. Norris
In the summer of 1917 it was decided to fireproof the main Tramway hoisting shaft of the Anaconda Copper Mining Co. at Butte, Mont. The shaft has three hoisting compartments and one pump compartment;
Jan 1, 1920
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Round Table: Carbon in Pig Iron - A Pig Iron, Low in Total Carbon, is in Demand for Use in Various Industries (with Discussion)By Enrique Touceda
The question as to the proper amount of total carbon that the malleable founder would prefer to have in pig iron for use in the production of air-furnace, white iron castings, must be considered from
Jan 1, 1927
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Mining Methods At Park City, UtahBy James Humes
THE active mines in the Park City district at the present time are the Silver King Coalition, Daly-Judge, Daly West, and Silver King Consoli¬dated. Several other companies, such as the Daly, American
Jan 2, 1915
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A Chemical Explanation Of The Effect Of Oxygen In Strengthening Cast IronBy W. McA. Johnson
THE work of J. E. Johnson, Jr., on the effect of small amounts of oxygen in cast iron in increasing its strength and resistance to shock, is of interest from the technical and scientific standpoints.
Jan 2, 1916
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Papers - Classification - Classification of Coal from the Standpoint of the Coal StatisticianBy F. G. Tryon
This paper treats only of the practicability of introducing a standard classification into the records of production and distribution of coal which we try to keep in the Bureau of Mines. From the p
Jan 1, 1930
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Deterioration Of Nickel Spark-Plug Terminals In Service - DiscussionPAUL. D. MERICA, Bayonne, N. J. (written discussion*)..-The mode of intercrystalline oxidation which the authors" have so well observed and described is characteristic of nickel that has been exposed&
Jan 12, 1919
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New York Paper - Importance of Hardness of Blast-Furnace Coke (with Discussion)By Owen R. Rice
Changes in coke hardness affect the working of the blast furnace, for soft coke is an obstacle to proper furnace operation. Soft coke is due to a low hydrogen-oxygen ratio in the coal charged; increas
Jan 1, 1922
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Papers - Solubility of Copper in Iron, and Lattice Changes during Aging (With Discussion)By John T. Norton
FoR many years the copper-bearing steels have been of considerable interest to the metallurgist because of their corrosion-resistant properties. More recently the discovery of their definite age-harde
Jan 1, 1935