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Pennsylvania: Counties - Armstrong CountyCoal was known in this county before 1819, but there is no record of its use before that year. In that year a furnace, the first one built in the northwestern countries, was put in blast on Bear Creek
Jan 1, 1942
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Arizona Paper - Modern Methods of Mining and Ventilating Thick Pitching BedsBy H. M. Crankshaw
The early methods of mining anthracite in the steep pitching Mammoth bed consisted in driving breasts up the pitch from the gangways and airways driven in the bed along the strike (Plate 2, Fig. 1). B
Jan 1, 1917
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Industrial Applications Of Disappearing-Filament Optical PyrometerBy F. E. Bash
A GREAT many industrial operations require the application of heat to carry on or complete processes, in which cases the temperatures must often be controlled within very narrow limits. For the lower
Jan 8, 1919
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Philadelphia, Pa. Paper - Progress of the Manufacture of Soda by the Ammonia-Soda ProcessBy Oswald J. Heinrich
SINCE my communication to the Institute at the Baltimore meeting in 1879,* in which I took the lead in emphasizing the importance of a new method in the manufacture of soda, already practiced to some
Jan 1, 1885
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New York Paper - The Position of Ae3 in Carbon-Iron Alloys. A DiscussionAlfred Stansfield, Montreal, Canada:—In Professor Howe's paper on the position of Ae3, he shows its industrial importance in determining the temperature to which steel should be heated for " grai
Jan 1, 1914
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Oxalates, MellatesBy William E. Ford, Edward Salisbury Dana
WheweUite. Calcium oxalste CaCz04.Hz0. In small colorless monoclinic crystals. Optically +. j3 = 1.555. From haxony, with coal; also from Bohemia, and Akace. Oxammite. Ammonium oxelate, (N&)rC20r.2HzO
Jan 1, 1922
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Papers - Theoretical Metallurgy and X-ray Metallography - An X-ray Study of the Nature of Solid Solutions (With Discussion)By Wheeler P. Davey, Robert T. Phelps
A study of solid solutions has long been a source of interest because of the conditions controlling their formation. X-ray investigations so far have been conducted with the idea that there were two t
Jan 1, 1932
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Mining Technology In The FutureBy J. B. Mudd
Introduction It is difficult to think of any activity on which mankind has been more dependent than mining, and certainly there is much evidence in almost every part of the world of old workings th
Jan 1, 1971
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Institute of Metals Division - Rate of Formation of Isothermal Martensite in Fe-Ni-Mn AlloyBy R. E. Cech, J. H. Hollomon
KURDJUMOV and Maksimova reported experiments with manganese steels and high carbon steels' and with an Fe-Ni-Mn alloy' in which mar-tensite was formed isothermally over a range of temperatur
Jan 1, 1954
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Institute of Metals Division - Investigation of the Heat Treatment of Commercial Titanium-Base Alloys (Discussion page 1326)By L. Luini, E. Lee
An exploratory survey of the heat treatment response of commercial titanium alloys (Ti-150A, RC-130B, and MST 3AI-5Cr al-loys) shows a wide range of possible hardness and microstructural characteristi
Jan 1, 1955
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Mining And Geology At The Helen MineBy S. J. Kidder, G. C. McCartney
THE Helen Mine, of the Algoma Steel Corporation, in the Michipicoten district, Ontario, Canada, has produced more than 6,240,290 tons of iron ore. Prior to and during World War I, 2,823,369 gross tons
Jan 1, 1946
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Description of Operations - Glass Sand and a Glass Industry in Puerto Rico (Mining Tech., Nov. 1945, T.P. 1939, with discussion)By Howard A. Meyerhoff, J. Earl Frazier
It is not known when silica sand was first noticed along the north coast of Puerto Rico, but the first mention of its occurrence was made in 1922, by N. L. Britton,1 who described its presence in isol
Jan 1, 1948
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Description of Operations - Glass Sand and a Glass Industry in Puerto Rico (Mining Tech., Nov. 1945, T.P. 1939, with discussion)By J. Earl Frazier, Howard A. Meyerhoff
It is not known when silica sand was first noticed along the north coast of Puerto Rico, but the first mention of its occurrence was made in 1922, by N. L. Britton,1 who described its presence in isol
Jan 1, 1948
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Principles Of Flotation, 111.-An Experimental Study Of The Influence Of Cyanide, Alkalis And Copper Sulfate On The Effect Of Sulfur-Bearing Collectors At Mineral SurfacesBy I. W. Wark
AN attempt has been made to compare the influences of the two most widely used depressants-alkalis and sodium cyanide-and the most widely used activator-copper sulfate-on the air-mineral contact induc
Jan 1, 1934
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Internal Friction Of An Alpha-Brass CrystalBy Clarence Zener
THE internal friction of nonferrous metals vibrating at low stress amplitudes has so far always been successfully interpreted in terms of inhomogeneities of one sort or another. Examples are the fluct
Jan 1, 1942
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Called “Mission Impossible”, Freeport’s Ertsberg Cu Project Convinces SkepticsDubbed "Freeport's Mission Impossible" by the trade press, the company's Ertsberg mine in West Irian nevertheless shipped its first concentrates in December 1972, ahead of schedule. This is
Jan 1, 1973
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Log Washers in the Aggregate and Flux-stone IndustriesBy A. R. Jr. Amos
LOG washers have been used for many years in the washing of clay iron ores, phosphate rock and manganese ores, but not until the past 15 years have they been employed to any extent in the preparation
Jan 1, 1936
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Geophysics and Geochemistry - The Application of Induced Polarization Probing Techniques Underground; Michigan Native Copper DistrictBy A. W. Schillinger
Drilling was not entirely satisfactory in the search for native copper in the Osceola amygdaloid footwall, for oreshoots mined were more continuous than drilling indicated. The Geophysics Dept of Mich
Jan 1, 1964
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Mechanical Properties of Steel - Influence of Plastic Deformation, Combined Stresses, and Low Temperatures on the Breaking Stress of Ferritic Steels (Metals Tech., Aug. 1947, T. P. 2220)By D. J. McAdam, G. W. Geil, R. W. Mebs
As shown in previous papers by the authorsg-17t the resistance of a metal to fracture, like its resistance to plastic deformation, is a function of all three principal stresses. A technical cohesion l
Jan 1, 1948
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Mechanical Properties of Steel - Influence of Plastic Deformation, Combined Stresses, and Low Temperatures on the Breaking Stress of Ferritic Steels (Metals Tech., Aug. 1947, T. P. 2220)By R. W. Mebs, G. W. Geil, D. J. McAdam
As shown in previous papers by the authorsg-17t the resistance of a metal to fracture, like its resistance to plastic deformation, is a function of all three principal stresses. A technical cohesion l
Jan 1, 1948