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Steel for Aircraft ConstructionBy Edward Richardson
As DEVELOPED up to the end of the Great War, an airplane was essentially a mechanism of wood and fabric, joined and held together by metal fittings and, fastening. The engine and accessories, wire for
Jan 1, 1928
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Fine Grind Minerals Beneficiation Division – MBD’s Annual Business MeetingBy Burt C. Mariacher
The Minerals Beneficiation Division meets each year at the Annual Meeting of AIME. All members are invited and encouraged to attend. For the information of those who did not attend the meeting in Denv
Jan 1, 1970
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Geophysical Exploration For OresBy Max Mason
IN 1923 a Western mining company was experimenting with the device of an inventor designed to locate buried ores by radio. Because the progress was slow and the results were confusing, the company beg
Jan 1, 1927
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Instruments for Projection DrawingBy J. M. Silliman
ISOMETRICAL drawing and clinographic projection are generally preferred to perspective drawings for representation of small objects or complicated mechanisms, as they present to the eye a sufficiently
Jan 1, 1882
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Geology Plays An Important Role In Radioactive Waste ManagementBy S. O. Reichert
The nuclear industry has made a considerable effort to reduce environmental pollution with the result that knowledge in the field of radioactive waste management is well advanced. An example of the me
Jan 9, 1968
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Officers for the year ending February 1908By AIME AIME
Council.* PRESIDENT OF THE COUNCIL. JOHN HAYS HAMMOND NEW YORK, N. Y. (Term expires February, 1908.) VICE-PRESIDENTS OF THE COUNCIL. HENRY M. HOWE NEW YORK, N. Y. J. B. GRANT DENVER, COLO. JAM
Mar 1, 1907
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Papers - Choosing a Composition for Low-alloy High-strength Steel (With Discussion)By J. H. Nead, J. W. Halley
The new low-alloy high-strength steels are obviously here to stay. With 75 per cent higher yield strength and 50 per cent higher tensile strength than plain carbon structural steel, they permit 20 to
Jan 1, 1936
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Papers - Choosing a Composition for Low-alloy High-strength Steel (With Discussion)By J. H. Nead, J. W. Halley
The new low-alloy high-strength steels are obviously here to stay. With 75 per cent higher yield strength and 50 per cent higher tensile strength than plain carbon structural steel, they permit 20 to
Jan 1, 1936
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Managing for Ore DiscoveriesBy Paul A. Bailly
Around 4500 B.C., the Pharaoh of Egypt ordered a military campaign to the Sinai Peninsula and the shores of the Red Sea, to search for copper deposits which Egypt needed for jewelry, vases and weapons
Jan 6, 1979
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Institute of Metals Division - Statistical Model for Nonsubstitutional Solutions: a) Interstitial Solutions, b) Deviation from Stoichiometry in Inorganic CompoundsBy M. Hoch
Equations are derived from statistical considerations to represent the activities of each component of an interstitial solution, and of a compound with a wide homogeneity range as a function of compos
Jan 1, 1964
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Materials for Nuclear PowerBy Stanley B. Roboff
Throughout the world nuclear power re- actors are being designed and constructed as the energy source for stationary power plants. They are built to power submarines, surface ships, and long-range air
Sep 1, 1956
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Future Demand For MetalsBy Foster Bain
THE outstanding characteristic of the last hundred years has been the world-wide rise in the standard of living. Man's dominion over nature is increasing with an accelerating pace and more and mo
Jan 10, 1926
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Reservoir Engineering-Laboratory Research - Role of Wettability and Interfacial Tension in Water FloodingBy N. Mungan
Laboratory water floods were performed in oil-wet and waterwet alundum and Torpedo cores, displacing a refined oil with n-hexylamine or Triton X-100 solution. Also, some floods were performed in which
Jan 1, 1965
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The Outlook for MiningBy James Boyd
It is obvious that mining has been influenced to a high degree by political and economic events, many of which are of such a nature that the mining industry has relatively little influence in shaping
Jan 5, 1950
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Need for Coal ResearchBy H. H. Lowry
SCIENCE attracts the attention and interest of an individual or an industry in general only in proportion to the apparent direct application to its immediate welfare or benefit. Engineering accomplish
Jan 1, 1936
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Minerals Beneficiation - High-Intensity Magnetic Separation of Iron OresBy O. E. Palasvirta
Close examination of most so-called n.eu processes in mineral dressing reveals that they were conceived and developed a long time ago. High-intensity magnetic separation is no exception. Although its
Jan 1, 1960
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Rotary Calciners For GypsumBy Frank Wilder
THE most important process in a gypsum mill is calcining the crude mineral. There seems, however, to be little progress or change in calcining methods. This would not be surprising if the industry was
Jan 2, 1925
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Planning for Coal GasificationBy Ralbern H. Murray
The decline in deliverability of conventional natural gas supplies and the general energy crisis have resulted in national programs directed toward the commercialization of energy conversion technolog
Jan 1, 1976
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Metals For Pyrometer StandardizationBy Charles Waidner
IN response to many urgent requests for a concrete realization of a series of standard temperatures that would be available to any one anywhere for the standardization of pyrometers and the reproducti
Jan 8, 1919
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Machines For Nonmetallic FlotationBy James A. Barr
THE writer's first experience with flotation was during World War I, in the beneficiation of Alabama graphite schist ores. One plant used a cone with a peripheral overflow; dried ore was distrib
Jan 1, 1945