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Building Stone of the Crab Orchard District, TennesseBy Benjamin Gi ldersleeve
Uniquely colored, thin-bedded quartzite is quarried between Crossville and Crab Orchard in Cumberland County, Tenn. It is produced in all sizes up to the limits of transportation from beds usually ran
Jan 1, 1950
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Non-metallic Mineral Industries of IllinoisBy J. E. Lamar
THAT Illinois is an important mineral producing state is well known. A value of over $237,000,000 for the mineral products in 1926 indicates the magnitude of the industries. Coal mining is the largest
Jan 1, 1929
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Modern Steels to Combat High TemperaturesBy C. L. Clark
EVERY user of steel should ask himself whether or not he is taking full advantage of the discoveries of the steel metallurgists during the last few years, or is merely buying grades that looked to be
Jan 1, 1940
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New Dimensions In Overland TransportationBy George H. K. Schenck
Diminishing returns in management's fight to lower manufacturing expenses have added luster to savings that can be achieved in delivered costs through creative management of the distribution func
Jan 1, 1967
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Description of Operations - The “Bonanza” Mica Operation of Purdy Mica Mines, Limited, Mattawan Township, Ontario (Mining Tech., Mar. 1947, T.P. 2154, with discussion)By Hugh S. Spence
In the winter of 1941-42, muscovite mica was discovered by a young prospector, Justin Purdy, in the township of Mat-tawan, Nipissing District, Ontario, a few miles north of the small settlement of Eau
Jan 1, 1948
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Description of Operations - The “Bonanza” Mica Operation of Purdy Mica Mines, Limited, Mattawan Township, Ontario (Mining Tech., Mar. 1947, T.P. 2154, with discussion)By Hugh S. Spence
In the winter of 1941-42, muscovite mica was discovered by a young prospector, Justin Purdy, in the township of Mat-tawan, Nipissing District, Ontario, a few miles north of the small settlement of Eau
Jan 1, 1948
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Orderly Production Brings Prosperity to East Texas FieldBy George C. Gibbons
ALMOST everyone in any of the five counties embracing the great East Texas field depends heavily upon oil for his living whether or not he actually owns a well or piece of royalty himself. Oil is a na
Jan 1, 1941
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Steelmaking - An Electrical Analogue of the Flow of Heat in a Regenerator SystemBy B. M. Larsen, K. Heindlhofer
Jan 1, 1945
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Institute of Metals Division - Discussion of The Mechanism of Boundary Migration in RecrystallizationBy W. C. Leslie
W. C. Leslie (Edgar C. Bain Laboratory for Funda mental Research)—This investigation, with its com bination of high-purity metal, calorimetry, and metallography, will serve as a model for annealing st
Jan 1, 1963
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Institute of Metals Division - X-Ray Diffraction Macroscopic Study of Deformed Aluminum CrystalsBy Robert E. Green, Kenneth Reifsnider
A microscopic X-ray diffraction technique was employed for the simultaneous study of the behavior of several families of lattice planes, whose local orientatiotz changes are manufestations of internal
Jan 1, 1965
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Aluminum And MagnesiumBy John D. Sullivan
MAJOR technical advances seldom occur in a single year, and this is especially true with aluminum and magnesium where marked improvements in metallurgical processes and products took place during the
Jan 1, 1948
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The Coal Industry ? Abnormal Conditions Continue as Producers Turn Out 685 Millions Tons - Postwar Planning Not NeglectedBy A. W. Gauger
DESPITE many handicaps and in the face of many discouragements anthracite and bituminous coal producers continue to supply the needs of the nation now vastly multiplied by the demands of the greatest
Jan 1, 1945
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Plentiful Supply of Nonmetallic Minerals Aids War EffortBy Paul M. Tyler
FOR the same reason that water is not missed until the well runs dry, the roles of many industrial minerals in wartime are often overlooked. In contrast to the growing shortages of many metals, our su
Jan 1, 1942
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Outokumpu Copper Mine and Smelter, FinlandBy Mäkinen, Eero
OUTOKUMPU, a large copper mine in eastern Finland, has the distinction of being one of the few important mines in the world discovered by a geologist the late Otto Triistedt, of the Geological Sur- ve
Jan 1, 1938
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Mining Geology ? Most Newly Discovered Ore Has Been Found in Old Districts, and by Conventional TechniquesBy H. J. Fraser
LIKE a runner catching his second wind, the mining geologist in 1944 has had some opportunity to appraise the result of three years of active and intense search for the metallic sinews of war and peac
Jan 1, 1945
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Methods for Determining Oxygen in Steel ? a Progress ReportBy J. G. Thompson
PROJECT 8411 of the U. S. Bureau of Standards, sponsored by the Iron and Steel Division of the A.I.M.E., is an attempt to define more concisely than has been possible heretofore the accuracy and the L
Jan 1, 1934
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The Development and Use of High-Speed Tool-Steel.By J. M. GLEDHILL
IT would doubtless have been felt by many but a few years back that there was little left to be said on the subject of crucible tool-steel, and that something akin to finality had been arrived at in i
Mar 1, 1905
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America's Stake In World Mineral ResourcesBy Alan M. Bateman
Before World War II we proudly considered that we were the nation of all the world most richly endowed in mineral resources. We knew it was no accident that those countries abundantly supplied with mi
Jan 1, 1949
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Mineral Resources and Mineral Resourcefulness - War's Drain on Reserves Must Be Met by Development of New TechniquesBy W. E. Wrather
DURING the war the mineral industry, and metal mining in particular, extended itself more than any other to attain the limit of its productive capacity. Likewise, probably no other industry went quite
Jan 1, 1946