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New York September, 1890 Paper - The Copper Resources of the United StatesBy James Douglas
The development of the copper-resources of this country has kept close pace with the unfolding of its geographical area to commerce. In colonial days, when our English ancestors occupied only the Atla
Jan 1, 1891
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Atlanta, Ga Paper - Chrome in the Southern Appalachian RegionBy William Glenn
In their account of chromium, Roscoe and Schorlemmer (Treatise on Chemistry, London, 1879) state that "In 1762 Lehmann, in a letter to Buffon, de nova minerœ plumbi specie crystalline rubra, described
Jan 1, 1896
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Occurrence of Mineral Deposits in the Pegmatites of the Karibib-Omaruru and Orange River Areas of South West AfricaBy Eugene N. Cameron
Pegmatites occur in abundance in certain areas of South West Africa and in adjacent parts of northern Cape Province in the Union of South Africa. Some of the pegmatite deposits were prospected before
Sep 1, 1955
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Melting Of Cathode Copper In The Electric Furnace*By Dorsey Lyon
INTRODUCTION THE electric furnace has always been found to be especially adapted to melting, refining, and finishing processes throughout its gradual acceptance by metallurgists, as a practical appar
Jan 8, 1914
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Mining Methods - Mining Marble (T. P. 626, with discussion)By George W. Bain
Methods of mining building stone of any sort are planned to produce as few fractures as possible, and present a strong contrast to methods of mining metallic ores, which must be crushed eventually and
Jan 1, 1938
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Engineering Reasearch - Reservoir Analysis and Geologic Structure. (Petr. Tech., NOV. 1942) (with discussion)By J. M. Bugbee
The engineer and the conservationist agree that effective water drive is the desirable reservoir production mechanism. Water drive may result either from the expansion of edge water, the reservoir wat
Jan 1, 1943
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Mining Methods - Mining Marble (T. P. 626, with discussion)By George W. Bain
Methods of mining building stone of any sort are planned to produce as few fractures as possible, and present a strong contrast to methods of mining metallic ores, which must be crushed eventually and
Jan 1, 1938
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Sand And Gravel (62cbaa27-c458-40f4-b219-b1e93ca344d5)By Harold B. Goldman, Don Reining
The sand and gravel industry is the largest nonfuel mineral industry in the nation. In 1981, the production of sand and gravel totaled 755 million tons valued at $2.3 billion. California, which leads
Jan 1, 1983
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New York Paper - Reverberatory Furnace for Treating Converter Slag at Anaconda (with Discussion)By Frederick Laist, H. J. Maguire
The ore from the Butte mines of the Anaconda company is quite siliceous; that is, it contains considerably less iron than is needed for the fluxing of the silica. The direct smelting of this ore, ther
Jan 1, 1921
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Engineering Reasearch - Reservoir Analysis and Geologic Structure. (Petr. Tech., NOV. 1942) (with discussion)By J. M. Bugbee
The engineer and the conservationist agree that effective water drive is the desirable reservoir production mechanism. Water drive may result either from the expansion of edge water, the reservoir wat
Jan 1, 1943
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Noise Problems with Underground Mining MachineryBy Edmund M. Warner
Any city dweller who has walked alone along a remote mine passageway has to be impressed by the eerie silence-the total absence of noise except for one's own breathing and scuffing of boots on th
Jan 1, 1979
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Some Experiments on Sintering Lead Sulphate ProductsBy G. L. Oldright
THE upper limit of richness of concentrates that can be smelted by means of the blast furnace without added diluents is fixed by the opera-tion of sintering. A sinter feed with normal gangue constitue
Jan 1, 1940
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Maintenance Facilities For Surface Mine OperationsBy Robert N. McIndoo, M. G. Woodle
10.5-1. Introduction. In the not-too-distant past, maintenance and the facilities for maintenance were considered a necessary evil to be given only secondary consideration in the development and plann
Jan 1, 1968
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Papers - - Estimation of Petroleum Reserves - Active Oil and Reservoir Energy (With Discussion)By R. J. Schilthuis
In 1929, Coleman, Wilde, and Moore1 undertook an investigation of the theoretical decline in reservoir pressure as related to the production of oil and gas. The most important part of this work was pr
Jan 1, 1936
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Papers - Mining - Occurrence and Flow of Gas in the Pocahontas No. 4 Coal Bed in Southern West VirginiaBy Lee Morris, Charles E. Lawall
This paper represents the results of a study to determine the source, mode of occurrence and conditions influencing the flow and liberation of large volumes of inflammable gas in the Pocahontas No. 4
Jan 1, 1934
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Papers - - Estimation of Petroleum Reserves - Active Oil and Reservoir Energy (With Discussion)By R. J. Schilthuis
In 1929, Coleman, Wilde, and Moore1 undertook an investigation of the theoretical decline in reservoir pressure as related to the production of oil and gas. The most important part of this work was pr
Jan 1, 1936
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Determination Of The Position Of Ae3 In Carbon-Iron Alloys.*By H. M. Howe
(New York: Meeting, October, 1913.) 1. INTRODUCTION.-This paper gives the results of our micro-graphic determinations of the position of Ae3 in a series of 14 hypo-eutectoid steels of varying carbon
Jan 6, 1913
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Some Principles Controlling The Deposition Of Ores (021935ec-0505-4f07-9ed2-8a0625fd92a1)By C. R. Van Hise
[Concluding Contribution of Prof. Van Hise to the Discussion of his Paper, and Others on the Same General Subject, presented at the Washington Meeting, February, 1900 (see Trans., xxx., 27, 177, 323,
Jan 1, 1902
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Analysis Of Oil-Field Water ProblemsBy A. W. Ambrose
THE underground losses of oil exceed by hundreds of thousands of barrels all the oil that has been lost in storage, transportation, or refining. The quantity lost is, of course, indeterminate; but whe
Jan 9, 1920
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New Haven Paper - On the Occurrence of the Brown Hematite Deposits of the Great ValleyBy Frederick Prime
The Great or Cumberland Valley, which (under a variety of names) extends from Canada, through Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, and East Tennessee, to Al