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Preparation of Industrial Minerals - Process for Manufacture of Dead-burned Magnesite and Precipitated Calcium Carbonate from Dolomite (Mining Tech., Mar. 1947, T.P. 2155, with discussion)By Robert D. Pike
In November 1939, on behalf of the Harbison-Walker Refractories Co., the author undertook the study of the problem of utilizing the dolomite of northwestern Ohio for the manufacture of calcined magnes
Jan 1, 1948
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Solid Solubility of Mercury in Silver and in GoldBy H. M. Day
THE constitution of the system silver-mercury has attracted the attention of many investigators during the last two decades, but since their results are for the most part in poor agreement, there is l
Jan 1, 1938
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Highlights Of Mining And Exploration Technology In 1961 I-Developments In Mining TechnologyPrimarily, 1961 was a year for widespread application of tools and techniques which have become operational in the past several years • • • Raising --Raise climbers and climber raising techniques have
Jan 2, 1962
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Chicago Paper - The Bessemer Process as Conducted in Sweden (See Discussion, p. 661)By Richard Akerman
At the International Sessions of the Iron and Steel Institute of Great Britain, the American Institute of Mining Engineers and the Verein Deutscher EisenhUttenleute, held in Allegheny City, Pa., in Oc
Jan 1, 1894
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Hoover Resigns As Grain ChairmanThe resignation of Herbert Hoover, Director General of Relief in Europe, from his post as Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Food Administration Grain Corporation, in which capacity he had serv
Jan 8, 1919
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A New Catalyst for Sulfuric-Acid ManufactureBy AIME AIME
S ULFURIC acid made in the United States during the last four years has averaged approximately 7,000,000 tons of 50" B6 acid a year. This is double the production of the year 1913. About 66 per cent o
Jan 1, 1929
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Institute of Metals Division - Metallography of Aluminum Powder ExtrusionsBy F. V. Lenel, G. S. Ansell, E. C. Nelson
IRMANN'S' discovery that extrusions of fine alumi-num-flake powders possess remarkable high-temperature strengths has led to the production of a new class of engineering materials whose prop
Jan 1, 1958
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Minerals Beneficiation - An Agglomeration Process for Iron Ore ConcentratesBy W. F. Stowasser
downdraft traveling grate process to agglomerate pelletized iron ore concentrates has been successfully demonstrated in a pilot plant at Carrollville, Wis. Work there followed se
Jan 1, 1956
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Microstructure; Diffusion; Atmospheres - The Effect of Cobalt on the Rate of Nucleation and the Rate of Growth of Pearlite (Metals Tech., Aug. 1947, T. P. 2211)By M. F. Hawkes, R. F. Mehl
The rate of isothermal transformation of austenite to pearlite depends upon the rate of nucleation, N, and the rate of growth, G, of pearlite in austenite. Values of N are given in terms of the number
Jan 1, 1948
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Microstructure; Diffusion; Atmospheres - The Effect of Cobalt on the Rate of Nucleation and the Rate of Growth of Pearlite (Metals Tech., Aug. 1947, T. P. 2211)By M. F. Hawkes, R. F. Mehl
The rate of isothermal transformation of austenite to pearlite depends upon the rate of nucleation, N, and the rate of growth, G, of pearlite in austenite. Values of N are given in terms of the number
Jan 1, 1948
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Officers And Directors (80f5bc5a-100d-4fe3-85aa-bac00184fc8a)For the year ending February, 1919 PRESIDENT SIDNEY J. JENNINGS NEW YORK, N. Y. PAST PRESIDENTS L. D. RICKETTS NEW YORK, N. Y. PHILIP N. MOORE ST. Louis, MO. FIRST VICE-PRESIDENT C. W. GOODALE
Jan 4, 1918
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Pittsburg Paper - The Girod Electric Furnace, and the French Works Using the Paul Girod Steel-ProcessBy Wilhelm Borchers
In all special branches of the chemical and metallurgical industries, in which large electric furnaces became necessary for carrying out new processes or for the improvement of old ones, the developme
Jan 1, 1911
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Chicago Paper - The Lead- and Zinc-Deposits of the Mississippi Valley (See Discussion, p. 621)By Walter P. Jenney
An investigation, conducted by the author, was begun in September, 1889, by the United States Geological Survey, having for its object the study of the questions bearing upon the occurrence and manner
Jan 1, 1894
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Honor Roll (fc6e60cf-f2c4-4156-aee5-08e8586e081d)The Honor Roll includes the names of all members of the Institute Whom we know to have been on active military duty it the date of compilation, Mar. 5, 1919. Despite our efforts to have this list accu
Jan 1, 1923
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Advisory Board for United States NavyThe members of the Institute have probably seen in the daily papers notices of the plans of the Secretary of the Navy to. form an Advisory Board to assist the Government to make available the latest i
Jan 9, 1915
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An Investigation Of The Technical Cohesive Strength Of MetalsBy D. J. McAdam, R. W. Mebs
THE technical cohesive strength of a metal means, not the interatomic forces, but the technically estimated resistance to fracture. An example of such resistance to fracture is the so-called "true" br
Jan 1, 1943
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Chemical And Electrochemical Problems Involved In New Cornelia Copper Co.'S Leaching ProcessBy Henry Mackay
THE interesting paper recently submitted by Messrs. Tobelmann and Potter' shows that chemical problems have developed which are of great interest in this new and important branch of metallurgy. T
Jan 9, 1919
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Minerals Beneficiation - Grinding Ball Size SelectionBy F. C. Bond
SIZE of grinding media is one of the principal factors affecting efficiency and capacity of tumbling-type grinding mills. It is best determined for any particular installation by lengthy plant tests w
Jan 1, 1959
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Nickel (5bef2318-de4f-4252-8504-33b883169380)By Paul D. Merica, O. B. J. Fraser
PROBABLY the first metallic objects used by man were nickel alloys. In search for flints suitable for the fashioning of their rude tools, our paleolithic ancestors, some 25,000 years ago, quite likely
Jan 1, 1953
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Safety Education in Schools and CollegesBy E. A. Holbrook
AS A whole, engineering schools have not awakened A to the fact that the workmen compensation laws passed in most of our states between 1914 and 1917 effected a quiet but none the less real revolution
Jan 1, 1925