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Industrial Minerals of North Carolina ? Pegmatites Worked for Many ProductsBy Jasper L. Stuckey
GEOGRAPHICALLY, North Carolina consists of three divisions, the coastal plain on the east, the piedmont plateau in the center, and the Appalachian mountain region on the west. Geologically, the State
Jan 1, 1947
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BromineBy J. H. Jensen
Bromine is the intermediate member of the halogen family of elements between iodine, a solid: and chlorine, a gas. The name is derived from the Greek "bromos," meaning stench. Bromine is the only nonm
Jan 1, 1975
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Minerals Beneficiation - Effects of Rod Mill Speed at Tennessee Copper Company - DiscussionBy J. F. Myers, F. M. Lewis
C. G. McLACHLAN*-I have read this paper with considerable interest and wish to congratulate the authors on the care with which they carried out their experiments and for the detailed sizing data they
Jan 1, 1950
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Papers - Production Engineering - Characteristics and Application of an Oil-base Mud (T.P. 1322, with discussion)By H. W. Hindry
This paper presents the ingredients com-~osing a type of oil-base mud that has been successfully used in drilling oil horizons in California, the effect of ingredient concentrations on physical proper
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Production Engineering - Characteristics and Application of an Oil-base Mud (T.P. 1322, with discussion)By H. W. Hindry
This paper presents the ingredients com-~osing a type of oil-base mud that has been successfully used in drilling oil horizons in California, the effect of ingredient concentrations on physical proper
Jan 1, 1941
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Reservoir Engineering - A Reservoir Study of the West Edmond Hunton Pool, Oklahoma (TP 2203, Petr. Tech., Nov. 1947, with discussion)By Gray L. L., Max Littlefield, Godbold A. C.
The West Edmond pool of Central Oklahoma, a limestone reservoir, has an area in excess of 29,000 acres and as of Sept. 15, 1946, had produced 53 million barrels of oil from 731 wells at an average dep
Jan 1, 1948
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Reservoir Engineering - A Reservoir Study of the West Edmond Hunton Pool, Oklahoma (TP 2203, Petr. Tech., Nov. 1947, with discussion)By Max Littlefield, Godbold A. C., Gray L. L.
The West Edmond pool of Central Oklahoma, a limestone reservoir, has an area in excess of 29,000 acres and as of Sept. 15, 1946, had produced 53 million barrels of oil from 731 wells at an average dep
Jan 1, 1948
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The Tar-Sands of the Athabasca River, Canada.By Robert Bell
THE " Tar-Sands." is the name which has been given to the extensive horizontal deposit of fine Cretaceous sand, blackened by tarry petroleum, which forms the banks of the last or lowest 130 miles of t
Mar 1, 1908
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Cleveland Paper - The Construction of Details for a Modern Lixiviation-PlantBy C. A. Stetefeldt
Jan 1, 1892
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Papers - Nonferrous Metallurgy - Progress in Production and Use of Tantalum (With Discussion)By George W. Sears
In preparing this symposium, our ambition was to elicit authoritative expression of opinion concerning important selected phases of the industry from men active in it. Responses to requests for contri
Jan 1, 1930
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Geology - Structural Elements of Ore Search in the Basin and Range Province, Southeast Arizona: Domes and Fracture IntersectionsBy Jacques B. Wertz
Detailed structural studies in southeast Arizona have successively revealed (1) the local attitudes of individual fractures (with lateral and/or vertical displacements), (2) the patterns exhibited by
Jan 1, 1969
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Use of Hydrogen Sulfide to Recover Copper from Acidic Leach SolutionsBy Clark A. Sumner, D. Arthur Burnham
A process for recovery of greater than 99% of the copper contained in acid leach solutions by sulfide precipitation using hydrogen sulfide as a hydrometallurgical reagent has been developed. The proce
Jan 1, 1974
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Geophysics: Its Technique Explained in Simple TermsBy Sherwin F. Kelly
THIS is intended as a simple review of the principles and practice of geophysics, so will not be of interest to the geophysicist, who is hereby warned of its elementary character. The engineers for wh
Jan 1, 1934
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Institute of Metals Division - Anisotropy and Preferred Orientation in Rolled Magnesium AlloysBy P. W. Bakarian, John C. McDonald
Three magnesium alloys were processed in various ways to exhibit a wide variation in the ratios of yield strength and tensile strength in the rolling direction compared to the cross-rolling direction.
Jan 1, 1965
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Instrumentation And Control Of Rotary KilnsBy John R. Green
ROTARY kilns, varying in construction, are used in a variety of processes. Products differ and operating conditions vary according to economic requirements. All of these variables influence the degree
Jan 1, 1941
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Iron and Steel Division - Thermodynamic Properties of Solid Solutions with Spinel- Type Structure: II. The System CO3O4-Fe3O4 at 1200°CBy Avnulf Muan, Egil Aukrust
The activity-composition curve for cobalt oxide in (Co,Fe)304 solid solutions with spinel-type stmcture has been determined experimentally by studying the equilibrium between the spinel phase and a co
Jan 1, 1964
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Clean Water From Coal MinesBy E. F. Jr. Young, H. E. Steinman, G. C. Smith
Through a progressive laboratory and pilot-plant program Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp has analyzed and corrected mine drainage pollution problems at all of its coal mines. In conducting this program, t
Jan 1, 1970
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Application and Utilization of the Enviro-Clear Thickener in a U.S. Steel Coal Preparation PlantBy A. A. Terchick, J. C. Anderson, D. T. King
During 1972-1973, U.S. Steel acquired an existing southern West Virginia high volatile coal mine property including a 150 tph heavy media feldspar jig preparation plant. Expansion of production from t
Jan 1, 1976
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Symposia - Symposium on Cohesive Strength (Metals Technology, December 1944) - Dilatometric Studies of the Graphitization of Cast Iron (With discussion)By N. A. Zeigler
GRaphitization phenomena occurring in solid cast iron have principally been studied from the angle of the reactions taking place during annealing of white castings in the manufacturing of malleable ir
Jan 1, 1945
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Drilling and Producing – Equipment, Methods and Materials - Buckling of Tubing in Pumping Wells, Its Effects and Means for Controlling ItBy Arthur Lubinski, K. A. Blenkarn
It is explained why the bottom portion of freely suspended tubing in a pumping well buckles and straightens in succession during the pumping cycle. Field evidence of resulting rod-on-tubing wear, exce
Jan 1, 1958