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Economics - Economics of Proration (With Discussion)By Joseph E. Pogue
Proration in the petroleum industry has come to mean a method for curtailing the production of crude petroleum by artificial effort, and it is in this sense that the term is employed throughout this p
Jan 1, 1932
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X-ray Study of the Action of Aluminum during Nitride HardeningBy John Norton
IN spite of the very general employment of nitride hardening, there is still considerable doubt as to the real nature of the mechanism involved. Experience has shown that the addition of small amounts
Jan 1, 1934
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The Development Of Blast-Furnace Construction At The Boston & Montana Smelter.By J. A. Jr. Church
I. EARLY FURNACES. . COPPER blast-furnace construction in America has long recognized a general standard in the rectangular water-jacketed shaft with separate forehearth. The details, however, and es
Jan 7, 1913
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Scope Of The Light-Weight Aggregates IndustryBy H. Herbert Hughes
THE trend in modern building construction is definitely toward the use of weight-reducing materials. The basic advantage of lighter structural weight is obvious; reduction of dead load with retention
Jan 1, 1931
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Institute of Metals Division - Study of the Radiation Stability of Austenitic Type 347 Stainless SteelBy J. R. Low, M. B. Reynolds, L. O. Sullivan
The effect of neutron bombardment upon the stability of type 347 austenitic stainless steel has been investigated by a magnetic technique. The relation of the ferrite content of a stainless steel to i
Jan 1, 1956
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Seventy-Five Years Of Progress In Mineral Industry EducationBy Thomas T. Read
It is natural, in reviewing the progress that has been made in mineral industry education during the three quarters of a century that has elapsed since the American Institute of Mining Engineers was o
Jan 1, 1947
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The Application Of Cathodoluminescence Microscopy To The Study Of Sparry Dolomite From The Viburnuei Trend, Southeast MissouriBy Robert L. Voss, Richard D. Hagni
Sparry dolomite from all of the operating mines in the Viburnum Trend of Southeast Missouri have been found by cathodoluminescence microscopy to reveal a systematic pattern of banding resulting from a
Jan 1, 1985
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Papers - Determination of Oxygen in Alloy Steels and Its Effect upon Tube Piercing (With Discussion)By Newell Hamilton
Some years ago, in the manufacture of seamless tubing from an alloy steel containing 0.07 per cent maximum carbon, 18 per cent chromium and 8 per cent nickel, at the plant of The Babcock & Wilcox Tube
Jan 1, 1934
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New York Paper - The Disposition of Natural Resources (with Discussion)By George Otis Smith
In the utilization of natural resources owner, operator, and consumer* should share the attendant benefits. Development needs to be planned under terms recognizing fully the interests of all concerned
Jan 1, 1915
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Mining Methods - Hydraulic Stripping of a Stone Quarry (T.P. 879, with discussion)By Mark Sheppard
DuRing the winter of 1937, the writer visited a West Virginia stone quarry at which the overburden is stripped hydraulically. The quarry is in a bed of limestone, about 200 ft. thick, which outcrops o
Jan 1, 1938
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Prospecting and ResearchBy Arthur Dwight
WE NOT have to go so very far back, when measured in actual years, to what may be considered the beginning of the industrial era of the great West, the discovery of gold in California in 1848, just 74
Jan 4, 1922
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Part V – May 1968 - Papers - Creep Mechanisms in Fe-4 pct Si AlloyBy A. Karim, T. G. Langdon, C. Y. Cheng, J. E. Dorn
The effect of changes in temperature and stress on the creep behavior of Fe-4 pct Si was investigated over the temperature range from 650° to 1175K Over the temperature range of 799° to 110l°K, the s
Jan 1, 1969
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Wilkes-Barre Paper - Classification of CoalsBy Persifor Frazer
A classification of natural objects is usually based either upon some fundamental and permanent attribute of the thing itself (as in the case of scientific classifications), or it embraces one or more
Jan 1, 1879
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Rochester Paper - Core-oven Tests (with Discussion)By F. L. Wolf, A. A. Grubb
The tests here described were rrlade to obtain information regarding costs, efficiency, etc. of baking cores in an oil-fired oven and two electric ovens, which were installed, early in 1920, in the co
Jan 1, 1923
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Papers - - Production - Domestic - Petroleum Development in Oklahoma in 1935By H. E. Rorschach
Activity in the oil and gas fields of Oklahoma was more pronounced in 1935 than in 1934, with 2320 completions, an increase of about 21 per cent. The state produced approximately 185,000,000 bbl. in 1
Jan 1, 1936
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Physical Chemistry Of Open-Hearth Refractories (a2767f51-5bc4-4625-8292-c2a4733b686f)COMPARED with the equipment used in most industrial processes, the open-hearth furnace has a relatively short life. The most important quality of an open-hearth refractory, therefore, is its rate of f
Jan 1, 1964
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Geological Relations Of Some Major Gold Deposits Of The Canadian Shield (583f62cf-c37c-4fce-b273-b3bd6d458275)By E. L. Bruce
GOLD occurs ill many mineral deposits in the rocks of the Canadian Shield. It is present in the ores of many base metals and a considerable quantity is recovered as a by-product from the production of
Jan 1, 1937
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The Application Of Oil-Well Surveying Instruments And Technical Services In The Mining IndustryBy G. L. Kothny
DEVELOPMENTS of well-surveying instruments, coring and core orientation, were in an advanced state when drilling for oil began-these developments actually originated with the mining industry.1 Survey
Jan 1, 1946
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Residual Stress in Caliber 0.30 Cartridge Cases ? with Discussion on Residual StressBy J. Mazia, H. Rosenthal
An investigation has been made of residual stress in the head and body of caliber 0.30 cartridge cases. The head was divided into four ring-lie sections which were cut off by a jeweler's saw. Spr
Jan 1, 1945
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Health Hazard from Dust in the Mines and Allied Industries of the United States-Initial Survey of the Extent and Severity (925733b1-d2e3-4be2-a373-ef5eca43b115)By M. Van Siclen
THE outstanding fact in connection with dust disease in the United States at present is the growing recognition of its seriousness by state officials and by the more progressive operators of mining, m
Jan 1, 1933