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What Graduates Expect Of The Coal IndustryBy William N. Poundstone
What attracts young engineering graduates into the coal industry? What do these young men expect of a career in coal mining? These questions are often asked and debated by mining men throughout the co
Jan 1, 1949
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Problems of Mineral SurplusBy C. K. Leith
THE outstanding fact of the mineral world today, at home and abroad, is the surplus of current production, and particularly of capacity for production, over current requirements. This is not by Any me
Jan 1, 1931
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Papers - Descriptive - Mercury Industry in Italy (Mining Tech., Jan. 1948, T.P. 2292, with discussion)By Edwin B. Eckel
This paper, based on brief field examination and on data supplied by the operators, records the condition of the Italian mercury industry as of March 1945, not long after Italy's collapse. Except
Jan 1, 1949
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Papers - Descriptive - Mercury Industry in Italy (Mining Tech., Jan. 1948, T.P. 2292, with discussion)By Edwin B. Eckel
This paper, based on brief field examination and on data supplied by the operators, records the condition of the Italian mercury industry as of March 1945, not long after Italy's collapse. Except
Jan 1, 1949
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The Mining and Milling of Garnet for Abrasive Papers and ClothsBy THOMAS S. MENNIE
ON GORE Mountain, about four and a half miles, southwest of the village of North Creek, Warren Co., N. Y., are the Barton Mines. Here is the largest known deposit of garnet in the world. This property
Jan 1, 1925
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Battelle Memorial InstituteBy B. D. Thomas
When the origin and early plans, of Battelle Memorial Institute were described in this journal in October 1929 by R. W. Gillett the first director, the doors of the laboratory had just been opened an
Jan 1, 1944
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Mineral Industry EducationBy William R. Chedsey
ALTHOUGH few changes can be reported in educational methods at the mineral technology schools during 1940, other events have taken place of direct interest to, and that will have a profound effect upo
Jan 1, 1941
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Petroleum Developments Colombia in 1941 and in 1945By O. C. Wheeler
In order that the series of reports on oil and gas in Colombia may be complete, the report for the year 1941, which was not available for Volume 160 of the TRANSACTIONS, is given here. The report for
Jan 1, 1946
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Slime-FiltrationBy George J. Young
(San Francisco meeting, October, 1911.) THE nature of slimes handled in the treatment of gold- and silver-ores has been discussed in technical literature to a considerable extent. The subject of slim
Nov 1, 1911
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Solving a Steel Production Problem ? Scrap Shortage Limits Output ? Sinter a Promising SubstituteBy Arnold Hoffman
A RESPONSIBLE steel executive recently declared that scrap shortages, despite fantastic prices reaching up to $50 per ton, are responsible for the loss of 140,000 tons of steel a month and that in Mar
Jan 1, 1947
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Buffalo Paper - The Silicon-Control of Carbon in Cast-IronBy F. E. Bachman
Although it has been apparent to me for a long time that too great weight was currently given to the silicon-contents of foundry-iron, and that the theory of the control by silicon of the carbon-conte
Jan 1, 1899
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Bureau of Mines Intermountain Station and Its Relation to the IndustryBy Thomas Varley
IN THE congressional act establishing the Bureau of Mines one of the functions outlined was "to assist I the industry in the prevention of mineral waste." This had not only to do with the waste in min
Jan 1, 1925
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62. Massive Sulfide Deposits of the Bagdad District, Yavapai County, ArizonaBy Robert L. Clayton, Arthur Baker
Two massive sulfide zinc-copper ore bodies are in quartz-sericite schist (probably formed by regional metamorphism of sediments) and andesite of the Precambrian Yavapai Series, on opposite sides of a
Jan 1, 1968
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Ruhr Coal - How Army Engineers Tackled the 'Dictator" of Western EuropeBy Paul Queneau
FEW of us who waded ashore on the Norman beaches realized the importance of coal to a successful invasion. General Eisenhower and his staff had been aware of the essential need for coal and an able So
Jan 1, 1946
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N.E.I. Tin Mining ResumedBy J. VAN DEN BERC
Tin production and export from the Far East are still a long way off from the prewar figures. The Malayan Peninsula, which had a rather good start directly after the war largely because of stock piles
Jan 1, 1949
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Use of Oxygenated Air in the Iron Blast FurnaceBy Charles Hart
THE-report of the advisory committee to the U. S. Bureau of Mines, on the use of oxygen in metallurgy, brings to the art of steelmaking a radical change in the method of operation of the many processe
Jan 11, 1924
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Minerals Beneficiation - An Improved Method of Gravity Concentration in the Fine-size Range - DiscussionBy H. Rush Spedden, Arvid Thunaes
R. R. Knobler and F. E. Albertson—Following the testwork done by Thunaes and Spedden, a Sullivan deck plant was built for the Colquiri mill. This plant started to operate in April 1945 and continues i
Jan 1, 1951
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Minerals Beneficiation - An Improved Method of Gravity Concentration in the Fine-size Range - DiscussionBy H. Rush Spedden, Arvid Thunaes
R. R. Knobler and F. E. Albertson—Following the testwork done by Thunaes and Spedden, a Sullivan deck plant was built for the Colquiri mill. This plant started to operate in April 1945 and continues i
Jan 1, 1951
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Mining and ManufacturingBy M. S. NORTH
IT may be a far cry from the days of the old horse whim, and it is relatively a long way back to hand production in factories. Modern machinery has made possible deep shaft-sinking, newer methods have
Jan 1, 1930
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AbstractsOn the following pages are abstracts of papers published by the Institute during the year 1935 as TECHNICAL PUBLICATIONS and CONTRIBUTIONS, papers in bound volumes appearing for the first time, and pa
Jan 1, 1936