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Purification of Zinc Ores in SinteringBy REED H. HYDE
IN these days of low metal prices and difficult marketing conditions, any treatment that will improve the grade of a product is of interest, particularly when the operation involves little or no addit
Jan 1, 1931
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Progress in the Reduction and Refining of Copper, 1929By Frederick Laist
THE past year has witnessed no radical changes in methods for the reduction and refining of copper. The Carson litigation was finally brought to a close ant1 the copper smelter is again free to introd
Jan 1, 1930
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Are You Going to "Present a Paper"?By S. Marion Tucker
THE aggregate number of "papers" read within any one year before more or less bored and bewildered audiences is simply appalling. We have seventy to eighty engineering societies alone, not to speak of
Jan 1, 1940
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Ground Movement and Subsidence Studies Aid in Solving Mining ProblemsBy George S. Rice
MANY studies on ground movement and subsidence have been carried on by members of the Institute during the past year, but only a few papers have reached maturity. Two of the mining schools of this co
Jan 1, 1936
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Production Engineering and Engineering Research - Some Studies on the Porosity and Permeability of Rocks (With Discussion)By F. G. Tickell, R. C. McCurdy, O. E. Mechem
The behavior of fluids in the voids of a rock is fundamental to the study of many of the problems of oil-field development and production. For it is by virtue of these openings between grains that oil
Jan 1, 1933
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Recent Developments In The Formation Of Aluminum And Aluminum Alloys By Powder MetallurgyBy G. D. Cremer, J. J. Cordiano
ALUMINUM powder is a well-known article of commerce and in various forms has been marketed widely for use in paint, for pyrotechnic purposes and for exothermic mixtures. For a number of reasons, how-
Jan 1, 1943
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An Evaluation Of Heat-Weakening Hard Rock As An Assist To Mechanic& TunnelingBy W. R. Davison, C. A. Brown, J. P. Carstens
INTRODUCTION The phenomenon of heat-weakening of rock with 10.6 micron radiation from a continuous-wave C02 gas laser has been investigated in detail at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for o
Jan 1, 1971
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Primary and Secondary Mining with Auger EquipmentBy D. M. Bondurant
Auger mining-extraction of coal with large diameter augers is proving profitable in recovering coal left after stripping has ceased to be economical. Its many advantages-low initial cost of equipment,
Jan 5, 1951
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Pipelining - Equipment, Methods and Materials - Axial Laminar Flow of Non-Newtonian Fluids in Narrow Eccentric AnnuliBy R. D. Vaughn
The analysis of laminar flow of power-law non-Newtonian fluids in narrow, eccentric annuli is employed in this paper to discuss the problems of lubricant flow in journa! bearings and of errors introdu
Jan 1, 1966
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Papers - Reactions in the Solid State, I-Initial Course of Subcritical Isothermal Diffusion Reactions in Austenite in an Alloy SteelBy Howard A. Smith
Of late considerable experimental and theoretical interest has been shown in the rates of transformation from a single phase, usually a supercooled solid solution, into one or more phases. Such reacti
Jan 1, 1935
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Papers - Reactions in the Solid State, I-Initial Course of Subcritical Isothermal Diffusion Reactions in Austenite in an Alloy SteelBy Howard A. Smith
Of late considerable experimental and theoretical interest has been shown in the rates of transformation from a single phase, usually a supercooled solid solution, into one or more phases. Such reacti
Jan 1, 1935
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The Functions of Power Scrapers and Slackline Cablemay ExcavatorsBy Harry Roe
THE power drag scrapers and the slackline cableway excavator have been called "long-range excavators." Broadly, their field of usefulness is restricted to work in which their long range of action perm
Jan 1, 1937
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Gold Deposition in the Black Hills of South Dakota and WyomingBy Lawrence Wright
THE occurrence of gold, gold-silver, silver-lead-zinc ores in the post-Cambrian sediments in the Black Hills of South Dakota, and their genetic relationship to the Tertiary intrusives, is well known a
Jan 1, 1936
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Measurement of Ordinary House VibrationsBy J. R. Thoenen
Six or seven years age the United States Bureau of Nines started development of instruments for the purpose of accurately measuring the vibrational movement of the earth in the vicinity of quarry blas
Jan 1, 1937
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Washington Paper - Crystalline Magnetite in the Port Henry, New York, MinesBy John Birkinbine
An unusually large number of crystals of magnetite obtained in the exploitation of a deposit of magnetic iron-ore of remarkable purity, encouraged the preparation of this paper, and its presentation a
Jan 1, 1890
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Concentration - Electrostatic Separation - Notes on Drying for Electrostatic Separation of Particles (Mining Tech., Nov. 1947, TP 2257, with discussion)By Foster Fraas
That variations in the humidity of the air and in the moisture content of a mixture of broken solids being separated electrostatically cause trouble is not new.' Much of the reputation for unreli
Jan 1, 1949
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Institute of Metals Division - The Atomic Volumes of Silicon, Germanium and Tin (TN)By T. Yoshioka, Paul A. Beck
SILICON, germanium, and tin occur with both the white tine-type structure and the diamond cubic structure. In the latter form these elements are semiconductors; in the former they are metallic. The me
Jan 1, 1965
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Underground Use Of Ammonium Nitrate - Fuel Oil ExplosivesBy John L. Ryon
Experimentation with ammonium nitrate fuel oil mixtures at three under-ground salt mines revealed its excellent applications at those properties. The author relates the present blasting practice used
Jan 4, 1961
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Personals (c155d347-bd42-48ea-8606-eab45065076f)[ ] Thomas C. Baker, Jr., has been transferred by the American Manganese Steel Div. of the American Brake Shoe Co., from their Oakland, Calif., branch to their Cleveland, Ohio, office. He will repres
Jan 1, 1952
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New York Paper - Modern Views of the Chemistry of Coals of Different Ranks as Conglomerates (with Discussion)By J. D. Davis, A. C. Fieldner
The older coal chemist had a much simpler conception of coal than we have today. To him coal was a mineral composed essentially of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, ash, and water, in variou
Jan 1, 1925