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RI 3848 Production of Lithium Chloride from Spodumene by a Lime-Gypsum Roast ProcessBy Earl T. Hayes, W. M. Sternberg, F. P. Williams
"INTRODUCTION The limited domestic demands for lithium salts and metal before the war were met readily by the use of minerals particularly lepidolite (lithium mica) and amblygonite (a lithium phosphat
Mar 1, 1946
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RI 8480 A Simple, Low-Cost Method for the Dissolution of Metal and Mineral Samples in Plastic Pressure VesselsBy R. F. Farrell
A goal of the U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines, is the advancement of minerals technology through the development of improved metals and minerals processing. In support of this goal, t
Jan 1, 1980
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IC 6175 Geophysical Abstracts - No. V - 1 - Gravitational Methods - Die Topographische Reduction Bei Drehwagenbachtungen (Corrections Of Observations With Respect To Topography Made By Means Of A Torsion Balance)By B. Numerov
A numerical proceeding of corrections with respect to topography is worked out for places near the station and a graphical one for the remote parts of the terrain. The description is clear and very de
Jan 1, 1929
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IC 7939 Cost Of Tonnage Oxygen ? Summary And ConclusionsBy Sidney Katell
Tonnage oxygen plants are or can be made available in sizes ranging from 150 to 1,000 tons per day. Capital requirements are estimated from $5,400 to $14,700 per daily ton, depending upon size of plan
Jan 1, 1960
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IC 7806 Use Of Lignin Sulfonate For Dust Control On Haulage Roads In Arid Regions ? Summary And IntroductionBy John P. Harmon
Vehicles traveling on untreated dirt and gravel roads at open-pit mines disseminate high concentrations of dust (fig. 1). Excessive dust creates safety hazards by reducing visibility and may endanger
Jan 1, 1957
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RI 4464 Sheath Working Of Metal PowdersBy J. R. Long
The investigations described herein are concerned with a portion of a systematic research, by the Federal Bureau of Mines on ductile titanium. The Bureau's work on the metal has resulted in devel
Jan 1, 1949
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RI 2902 Preliminary Ore Dressing Tests To Recover Manganese In Rhodochrosite Ores ? IntroductionBy F. D. DeVaney
The supply of manganese is a subject of much interest. The idea of obtaining it from rhodochrosite-MnC03 is attractive because the carbonate is supposed not to be so contaminated with impurities as th
Jan 1, 1928
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IC 6513 Method And Cost Of Quarrying Limestone At The Quarry Of The Trinity Portland Cement Co., Fort Worth, Tex. ? IntroductionBy J. William Ganser
This paper is one of a series being prepared by the United States Bureau of Mines describing mining and milling methods and costs at cement-plant quarries throughout the United States. These papers
Jan 1, 1931
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RI 5635 Determining the Safety Characteristics of Unsymmetrical DimethylhydrazineBy Michael G. Zabetakis, Glenn H. Damon, Joseph A. Herickes
The flammability and explosibility of unsymmetrical dimethylhydrazine ( UDMH ) were investigated by the Federal Bureau of Mines to evaluate hazards associated with commercial application of this mater
Jul 1, 1960
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RI 6529 Recovery of Tin From Hardhead by FiltrationBy J. A. Ruppert, P. M. Sullivan
A study was made of filtration techniques for recovering the major part of the tin contained in iron - tin alloys known as hardhead . Special smallscale filtering apparatus and a three - stage cyclic
Jan 1, 1964
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RI 5051 Factors Affecting The Incendivity Of Permissible Explosives ? IntroductionBy N. E. Hanna
[Testing explosives for safe use in coal miner ran boon an important factor in preventing mine explosions. In the United States, explosives that have been approved by the Bureau of Mines are called pe
Jan 1, 1954
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RI 5540 Preparation Of Rare-Earth Chloride Solutions ? SummaryBy A. C. Rice
This report describes a chemical process for preparing solutions of trivalent rare-earth chlorides from sulfate solutions obtained by treating bastnasite concentrate. The chief impurity in the final s
Jan 1, 1959
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IC 9022 Field Trials Of A Portable Microseisrnic Processor RecorderBy John P. Coughlin
The Bureau of fines has tested a portable microseismic processor recorder at the Galena Mine, Wallace, ID, both in an environmentally controlled enclosure and, with minimal protection, in a working ar
Jan 1, 1985
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IC 6516 Mining Laws of Great BritainBy E. P. Youngman
Great Britain has never had a basic raining law such as is in force in most foreign countries. This lack may be due to the fact that, with the exception of gold and silver, all metals or minerals belo
Oct 1, 1931
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RI 9022 - Recovery of Silver, Gold, and Lead From a Complex Sulfide Ore Using Ferric Chloride, Thiourea, and Brine Leach SolutionsBy R. G. Sandberg
The Bureau of Mines investigated a hydrometallurgical procedure to recover gold, silver, and byproduct lead from a complex lead-zinc sulfide ore. A ferric chloride (FeCI3) preleach, at 40° C in 6 h, e
Jan 1, 1986
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RI 8792 - Corrosion of Selected Metals and a High-Temperature Thermoplastic in Hypersaline Geothermal BrineBy R. K. Conrad
The Bureau of Mines conducted corrosion research to determine suitable construction materials for geothermal resource recovery plants. Weight loss, pitting and crevice corrosion, U-bend stress corrosi
Jan 1, 1983
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RI 6350 Reconnaissance of Tellurium Resources in Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah. Including Selected Data From Other Western States and MexicoBy F. D. Everett
Thermoelectric and metal alloying applications have changed the status of tellurium from oversupply to under supply . In a search for new sources of this element in Arizona , Colorado , New Mexico , U
Jan 1, 1964
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IC 6637 Research Activities in the Mineral Indusgtries of the USBy BUREAU OF MINES
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Sep 1, 1932
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IC 7459 Support of Ground, Iron-Ore Mines, Lake Superior DistrictBy Frank E. Cash, Max S. Peterson
"INTRODUCTION Falls of ground cause the greatest number of accidents at underground metal mines. Statistics compiled by the Federal Bureau of Mines show that during a 13 - year period ended in 1943, f
May 1, 1948
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RI 6595 Field Testing Of The Explosive-Anchored RockboltBy Edward W. Parsons
The explosive-anchored rockbolt was field tested in six mines where rock conditions varied from incompetent shale or mudstone through fairly soft sand-stone to firm sandy shales. The purpose of the te
Jan 1, 1965