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Government Actions And The Mineral Industry (258f39ae-c1a2-4cc1-9367-34f38d87beb5)Duty on Lead Reduced. -On December 28, the President signed H.R. 5047 which reduces the duty on unwrought lead from 3.5% ad valorem to 3% ad valorem, with a floor level of 1.0625 cents per pound, effe
Jan 1, 1980
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IC 8266.1 Review and Evaluation of Silver-Production TechniquesBy B. H. Clemmons, C. H. Schack
Extractive metallurgy techniques currently employed to recover silver from primary ores and secondary scrap were reviewed and evaluated to identify and delineate metallurgical problems whose resolutio
Mar 1, 1965
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IC 6123 Graphite - Part III - Utilization Of Graphite ? IntroductionBy Paul M. Tyler
The outstanding trend in the graphite market is the fast-growing demand for cheaper qualities of graphite and the declining consumption of the more expensive varieties. The manufacture of graphite, cr
Jan 1, 1929
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RI 3757 Technical & Economic Study of Packaged FuelBy Parry. V. F.
"SUMMARY This report reviews the status of the packaged-for industry as of 1941. A field study was made of 35 representative plants to obtain technics and economic data on different types of processes
Jun 1, 1944
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Carbonizing Properties: British Columbia, Matanuska Valley (Alaska), And Washington Coals And Blends Of Six Of Them With Lower Sunnyside (Utah) Coals ? IntroductionBy J. D. Davis
THIS-report gives results of in investigation of the carbonizing properties of 18 coals, including 2 from Alaska, 12 from British Columbia, 3 from Washington, and 1 from Utah. Each coal was carbonized
Jan 1, 1952
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Time-Lapse Tomography of A Longwall Panel: A Comparison of Location SchemesBy Kray Luxbacher, Erik Westman, Peter Swanson
Three-dimensional time-lapse velocity tomograms were generated to image stress redistribution around a longwall panel to produce a better understanding of the mechanisms that lead to ground failure. M
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RI 2870 The Occurrence Of Jarosite Minerals In Oxidized Lead Ores As A Factor In Metal LossesBy R. E. Head
[Recent investigations at the Intermountain Experiment Station of the Bureau of Mines at Salt Lake City indicate that metallurgists have given little attention to the occurrence of jarosite minerals i
Jan 1, 1928
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OFR-47(4)-83 Ecological Studies On The Revegetation Process Of Surface Coal Mined Areas In North Dakota - 4. Soil And Vegetation Development On Topsoiled AreasBy Louis R. Iverson
Patterns of species colonization, biochemical interaction among species, and competitive phenomena were studied in four reclaimed areas in western North Dakota ranging in age from one to four years af
Jan 1, 1982
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RI 3715 Engineering Study of Rodessa Oil Filed in In Louisiana, Texas, and ArkansasBy R. K. Guthrie, H. B. Hill
"INTRODUCTION The Rodessa oil field in Marion and Cass Counties, Tex., Miller County, Ark., and Caddo Parish, La., was discovered in August 1930, when a well drilled to a depth of 5,506 feet in Caddo
Aug 1, 1943
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IC 9187 Phosphate Availability And Supply - A Minerals Availability AppraisalBy R. J. Fantel
The Bureau of Mines investigated the resources, costs, capacities, market relationships, and short- and long-run supply of phosphate rock and phosphoric acid. The 206 mines and deposits evaluated in 3
Jan 1, 1988
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RI 2554 Cooling Of Mine AirBy T. T. Read, F. C. Houghten
"The bad effects upon the health and output of miners that result when the ventilating current in a mine lacks sufficient cooling power have been described by Harrington and Sayers in a previous repor
Dec 1, 1923
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IC 7414 Geophysical Abstracts 127, October-December 1946, with an Index to Abstracts 124-127, compiledBy V. L. SKITSKY
Geophysical Abstracts are published by the Division of Geophysical Explo- ration of the U. S. Bureau of Mines as an aid to those engaged in geophysical research and exploration. Inasmuch as geophysici
Jun 1, 1947
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RI 3761 History of Water Flooding of Oil Sands in KansasBy Peter Grandone
"INTRODUCTION The injection of water into partly depleted-oil-bearing formations as a means of supplying additional energy to flow oil wells now is recognized by the petroleum industry as an effective
Jul 1, 1944
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RI 6632 Spectrochemical Analysis Of TungstenBy Jr. Gabler
Methods for the direct spectrochemical determination of impurities at the parts-per-million level in tungsten metal and oxide are presented. Several published procedures were investigated and numerous
Jan 1, 1965
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RI 4839 Flammability Of Mixtures Of Individual Paraffin-Hydrocarbon Gases With Air And Added Nitrogen At Subatmospheric PressuresBy G. S. Scott
Safety problems in the mining and allied industries have led the Bureau of Mines to investigate over a period of years; the flammability (explosibility) of many types of combustible atmospheres princi
Jan 1, 1952
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RI 3829 Electrolytic Manganese in Stainless-Steel Tests at Rustless Steel Corp. and Universal-Cyclops Steel Corp.By R. T. C. Rasmussen
"INTRODUCTION The primary purpose of the Bureau of Mines electrolytic manganese pilot plant at Boulder City, Nev., is to improve the Bureau-invented electrowinning process and to determine the applica
Oct 1, 1945
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Bulletin 13 Resume Of Producer-Gas InvestigationsBy R. H. Fernald, C. D. Smith
When the United States Geological Survey began operations at the coal-testing plant erected at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition at St. Louis, Mo., in 1904, it had already outlined a comprehensive pla
Jan 1, 1911
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OFR-5-74 Summary Of Heavy Metals Study At San Juan Ridge, Nevada County, CaliforniaBy Russell R. McLellan
The Tertiary channel gravel deposits in northern California were selected Or detailed investigation by the U. S. Bureau of Mines as part of a national program to locate potential sources of gold that
Jan 1, 2012
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RI 8837 Stratification in Water Quality in Inundated Anthracite Mines, Eastern PennsylvaniaBy K. J. Ladwig
The Bureau of Mines conducted a field investigation of the water quality in inundated underground coal mines in the Northern Anthracite Field, eastern Pennsylvania. Water samples were collected at mul
Jan 1, 1984
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IC 9508 - The Application of Major Hazard Risk Assessment (MHRA) to Eliminate Multiple Fatality Occurrences in the US Minerals IndustryBy A. Iannacchione
Major Hazard Risk Assessment (MHRA)1 is used to help prevent major hazards, e.g., fire, explosion, wind-blast, outbursts, spontaneous combustion, roof instability and chemical and hazardous substances
Jan 1, 2008