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Studies Of Dust Knockdown By Water Sprays Using A Full-Scale Model Mine EntryBy F. N. Kissell, W. E. Schroeder, N. I. Jayaraman
This article discusses methods of improving airborne capture by conventional dust suppression systems. The work was performed in a full-scale plywood model of a mine entry with a wooden mockup of a Jo
Jan 1, 1986
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Meeting Announcements - Denver-Round the Town - February 15-19, 1970Denver, the Mile High, Queen City of the Plains, your host for AIME's 99th Annual Meeting has many exciting and picturesque places for you to visit during your stay. A host of restaurants cater t
Jan 1, 1970
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in the Texas Panhandle in 1941By Henry Rogatz, H. W. McCue
Oil.—In the Texas Panhandle, during the year of 1941, 647 oil wells were drilled with a total daily initial production of 133,435 bb1.—that is, 145 more oil wells than in the previous year, with a dec
Jan 1, 1942
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Processing and Marketing Muscovite Block and Film MicaBy Robert D. Thomson
Listed among strategic and critical minerals for stockpiling, mica is an important raw material in electronic and electrical equipment industries. Each year large quantities are consumed in the manufa
May 1, 1956
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New York September, 1890 Paper - Some Ontario MagnetitesBy T. D. Ledyard
SIR WILLIAM LOGAN, our great geologist, predicted that Canada would become eventually one of the greatest iron-producing countries of the world. Although possessed of numberless deposits of iron-ore,
Jan 1, 1891
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B.O.P. Vessel Linings And Operations At South WorksBy Robert J. Alberts
Our shop started up in April of 1969, and during its 8th month of operation produced over 300,000 tons. Production continued to increase, and by January of 1970 tonnage rates significantly above 300,0
Jan 1, 1972
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The Outlook For ScrapBy Edwin C. Barringer
IRON and steel scrap has again become page one news, as it was during the war. To many this is anomalous because the common concept is that the theaters of war are literally paved with scrap as the by
Jan 1, 1947
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Chemomechanical Phenomena in Hard Rock DrillingBy N. M. Macmillan, R. S. Kalyoncu, A. R. C. Westwood
The environment-sensitive hardness and laboratory-scale rotary drilling behavior of granite, quartz, and feldspar have been studied. By controlling the chemistry of the drilling environment, it is pos
Jan 1, 1975
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Chicago, Ill Paper - A Mexican Cupellation-HearthBy W. Lawrence Austin
At the Troy meeting of the Institute, in October, 1883, I presented a paper entitled "Smelting Notes from Chihuahua, Mexico,"" in which was briefly described a cupellation-hearth, commonly met with in
Jan 1, 1885
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New York City Paper - Biographical Notice of Benjamin SillimanBy Sterry Hunt
The American Institute of Mining Engineers, and American science in general, have sustained a great loss in the death of Prof Benjamin Silliman, deceased at New Haven, Connecticut, on the 14th of Janu
Jan 1, 1885
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Electrostatic Coalescence in a Solvent Extraction Process (VOL-274)By B. C. Johnson, K. L. Sublette, F. L. Prestridge
A problem common to the petroleum and mining industries is the resolution into its component phases of mixtures composed of a polar liquid dispersed in an immiscible, continuous nonpolar liquid. In th
Jan 1, 1984
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Affiliated Student Societies (1917)The Oregon School of Mines Society held its regular monthly meeting on the evening of October 23. This meeting was an informal reunion at which members gave accounts of personal experiences during the
Jan 12, 1917
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Wyoming And Montana - WyomingOn August 4, 1844, J. C. Fremont made the first record found of coal in Wyoming. On the North Fork of the Platte River, beyond Medicine Butte, in Carbon County, he noted: "in the precipitous bluffs we
Jan 1, 1942
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The Possible Occurrence of Oil and Gas Fields in Washington (f4e9b7a1-1409-48f5-a506-69ad05490e58)By Charles E. Weaver
Discussion of the paper of CHARLES E. WEAVER, presented at the San Francisco meeting, September, 1915, and printed in Bulletin No. 103, July, 1915, pp. 1419 to 1427. MILNOR ROBERT, Seattle, Wash.-A y
Jan 12, 1915
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Computer Analysis And Applications Of Field-Acquired Spectral Reflectance DataBy Barry S. Siegal
Spectral reflectance data in the wavelength region of 0.45 to 2.4 µm have been obtained for various rock types and different forms of natural vegetation by means of JPL's portable field reflectan
Jan 1, 1977
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Mine Workings Layout For "Over-The-Raise" Continuous Advancing In Gently Inclined Seams And Optimization Of Associated ParametersBy Zhengbo Pan, Fujun Gou, Jifei Chen
This paper discusses the various alternatives that are technically feasible for "over-the-raise" continuous advancing in gently inclined coal seams and the computer-aided selection of the optimal mini
Jan 1, 1983
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The Relation of Sulphur to Variation in the Gravity of California PetroleumC. W. WASHBURNE; New York; N. Y. (communication to the Secretary *).-It has long been known that sulphur and oxygen react upon crude oils, removing hydrogen and thereby creating unsaturated hydrocarbo
Jan 10, 1917
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Rock Disintegration- The Key To Mining ProgressBy George B. Clark
More economical methods of rock disintegration are needed for mining and for rapid excavation. Two major systems are drill and blast and mechanical excavation, including tunnel-boring machines. Curren
Jan 1, 1971
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Hydraulic Backfilling- Effects On Mining Methods - Use Of Sands And Slurries - Trends In Current Practices - Possible Future DevelopmentsBy Richard Maclin Stewart
A priest at Shenandoah, Pa., one day persuaded the president of the Philadelphia & Reading Coal & Iron Co. to slush breaker waste and culm into old mine workings in order to save his church from being
Jan 4, 1958