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Ammonia Revival for the Keweenaw?By R. S. Shoemaker
Mines are closed for two reasons; exhaustion of ore or insufficient price for the mineral. On the other hand, the reopening of an old mine can be the result of any one of three events; the discovery o
Jan 5, 1972
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Officers and Directors (72652dc7-ed01-4971-a652-a129c0e9b643)PAST PRESIDENT WILLIS MCGERALD PEIRCE New York City PRESIDENT-ELECT AND TREASURER ANDREW FLETCHER New York City VICE-PRESIDENTS O B J FRASER, New York City J B MORROW,' Pittsburgh, Pa. J L
Jan 1, 1952
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Officers and Directors (f762650c-6a9c-439e-a274-f05f700cd053)PRESIDENT Michael Lawrence Haider New York City PAST PRESIDENT Willis McGerald Peirce New York City VICE-PRESIDENTS 0. B. J. Fraser, New York City J. B. Morrow, Pittsburgh, Pa. J. L Gillson
Jan 1, 1952
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One Step in Production ControlBy George Smith
THE discussion of production control at the Insti-tute's annual meeting was profitable in that it started some thinking. One pertinent question there raised was how the opening of new mines, whos
Jan 5, 1928
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Freezing Techniques For Shaft SupportBy T. R. Braithwaite
The brief comments made in this chapter deal mainly with shaft sinking, but don't assume that freezing techniques apply only to shaft sinking. They can be used on tunnel work, on such things as l
Jan 1, 1970
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Industrial Minerals Of 1969- Their Status, Challenge And FutureAs 1970 develops and industrial minerals stand at a crucial point in their progress, research and development programs appear to be the key needed to open up new uses for each mineral's future gr
Jan 1, 1970
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Incentives for the Mining IndustryBy Donald B. Gillies
The fundamentals of human nature don't change much from generation to generation, or even from century to century. Except for the spur of necessity and the lure of reward and ad venture, few of u
Jan 5, 1950
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Virginia Beach Paper - A Convenient Still for the LaboratoryBy Charles E. Wait
In the use of the apparatus purchased for the new chemical laboratories of the university, no piece has given us more satisfaction, or has been a greater success, than a new still which is the subject
Jan 1, 1895
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United States Mineral Resource PotentialBy V. E. McKelvey
Some understanding of the United States mineral resource potential is essential for planning and policy making for the future. Reserves of some minerals are essentially lacking and for many others the
Jan 1, 1976
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Townships Named For Mining EngineersThe following communication has just reached the Institute, from the office of the Provincial Geologist, Department of Lands,-Forests and Mines, Ontario, Canada: During the autumn of 1917 gold was di
Jan 6, 1918
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Institute of Metals Division - Redetermination of the Chromium and Nickel Solvuses in the Chromium-Nickel SystemBy C. J. Bechtoldt, H. C. Vacher
Quenched alloys, prepared by powder metallurgical techniques, were examined by microscopic and X-ray diffraction methods. The compositions and heat treatments were chosen so that the chromium and nick
Jan 1, 1962
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Canvas Tubing For Mine VentilationBy L. D. Frink
THOSE actively interested in mining are fully aware of the ever-increasing difficulty of making conditions such that efficient work can be clone in underground openings, especially as higher rock temp
Jan 1, 1918
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Sensitivity Analysis For Mining ProjectsBy John C. Robison
INTRODUCTION Sensitivity analysis is a means of gauging the impact of individual risks on a financing. Key risks can occur in three time periods: - Feasibility, engineering and construction phas
Jan 1, 1985
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Papers - - Produciton - Domestic- Oil and Gas Development in Southwest Texas during 1934By Olin G. Bell
The year 1934 in Southwest Texas was marked by aggressive development and exploratory work and resulted in the finding of five new fields and a new producing horizon in one of the older fields. This a
Jan 1, 1935
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A Proposed New Converter, And The Application Of The Bessemerizing Process To The Smelting Of OresBy Herbert Haas
1. INTRODUCTION COPPER matte is now converted into blister copper at a cost of only $5 per ton of copper, or, based on a 40 per cent. matte, $2 per ton of matte, which is the record of at least one l
Jan 6, 1914
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Notes On Potash ProductionBy J. Marshall Downey
The most fortunately situated U. S. potash producer-whether in New Mexico, California, or Utah--once simply took from the ground a mixture of sodium chloride and potassium chloride, crushed it to a ma
Jan 12, 1958
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Optimizing Roof Truss Installations With Body-Loaded Photoelastic ModelsBy Christopher Haycocks, Lawrence P. Johnson, George M. Neall, James M. Townsend
No method of roof control yet devised has proven to be universally acceptable for the wide range of strata conditions experienced in U. S. coal mines. However, a relatively new innovation, the roof tr
Jan 6, 1978
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Crushing-Machines For Cyanide Plants.By MARK H. LAMB
(Canal Zone Meeting, November, 1910.) THE recent growth of a sentiment among cyanide-plant designers against the use of gravity-stamps for the crushing preliminary to cyanidation may be said to date
Jul 1, 1910
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Effects of Inclusion Streaks on the Tensile and Dynamic Properties of Wrought Iron and Similar MaterialsBy F. R. Hensel
THE demand for clean steel is increasing daily. New processes of refining steel are being developed in order to remove all nonmetallic inclusions as completely as possible, as it is the general opinio
Jan 1, 1932
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Papers - Suggestions for the Control of Silicosis in Mining (T.P. 930)By Donald E. Cummings
Measures appropriate for the control of the silicosis hazard in mining cannot be formulated precisely, but sufficient knowledge1-l9 has accumulated during the past quarter century to permit the sugges
Jan 1, 1940