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Rank of Iron Ore Mining Companies in 1933By AIME AIME
TOTAL shipments of iron ore from the Lake Superior district totalled 21,672,410 long tons in 1933, according to a compilation in Skillings' Mining Review. The producers ranked as follows in order
Jan 1, 1934
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General Principles of Chemistry As Applied to MineralsBy William E. Ford, Edward Salisbury Dana
447. Minerals, as regards their chemical constitution, are either the uncombined elements in %native state, or definite compounds of these elements formed in accordance with chemical laws. It is the o
Jan 1, 1922
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Part I. Mine FinancingBy Carroll C. Bailey, William F. Boericke
Mine financing, or providing adequate capital for developing and bringing a mining property into production, is an essential requirement for a successful operation. Today it presents a different pictu
Jan 1, 1964
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International Aspects Of The Petroleum Industry Of The FutureBy William Fraser
SINCE the operative word in the subject on which I have been asked to speak is "international," I need hardly emphasize before such an audience as this that it is one which calls for some discretion o
Jan 1, 1947
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Deoxidation of Copper with Calcium and Properties of Some Copper-calcium AlloysBy Earle Schumacher
COPPER-CALCIUM alloys are of interest as materials for use in deoxidized conductors of high conductivity. That calcium is effective in deoxidizing and degasifying copper is well known. Brandenberg and
Jan 1, 1929
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Wasting a Valuable National Resource (Bituminous Coal)By Howard N. Evanenson
WASTE of coal, or perhaps more properly the percentage of its recovery in mining, has keenly interested me during an experience of over a half century in coal mining. In the early part of that time an
Jan 1, 1946
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Classification and Compensation of Government Federal EngineersBy AIME AIME
NO ADEQUATE salary scale, at the present time, can ignore the increase in the cost of commodities 'during the last few years or- afford to assume that this increase is merely temporary. A study
Jan 1, 1920
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New York Paper - The Verschoyle Pocket TransitBy W. Denham Verschoyle
In designing a pocket instrumeut whereby any giver1 horizontal or vertical angle may be closely approximated, the following points should be kept in view, if general utility is aimed at : 1. The in
Jan 1, 1908
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Effect Of Pulp Depth And Initial Pulp Density In Batch ThickeningBy S. R. Mitchell, M. C. Fuerstenau, A. M. Gaudin
The two principal attributes of a thickener pulp are its settling rate and the ultimate pulp density of the thickened mud. Testing for evaluation of thickening attributes of a pulp has usually been do
Jan 6, 1959
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Steady-State Creep Of Rock Salt In GeoengineeringBy Tom W. Pfeifle, Paul E. Senseny
INTRODUCTION Engineered structures such as mines, shafts and tunnels, and storage caverns for hydrocarbons, chemical s and brine are being built in natural rock salt formations in increasing numbe
Jan 1, 1982
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Reservoir Engineering-General - Effect of Linear Discontinuities on the Pressure Build-Up and Drawdown BehaviorBy B. K. Larkin, H. K. van Poollen, H. C. Bixel
A detailed treatment is given of the transient pressure behavior of a well located near a linear discontinuity. On either side of the discontinuity, the values of permeability, viscosity, compressibil
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Minerals Beneficiation - Relative Effectiveness of Sodium Silicates of Different Silica-Soda Ratios as Gangue Depressants in Non- metallic FlotationBy C. L. Sollenbeger, R. B. Greenwalt
PERHAPS the most widely used dispersants or gangue depressants in nonmetallic flotation are sodium silicates, which vary in silica-to-soda ratio from 1 to 3.75. Typical manufactured silicates in order
Jan 1, 1959
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Chicago Discussions - Discussion of paper Prof. ?kermann (See p . 265)Joseph HartshoRnE, Pottstown, Pa.: I have read Professor Akerman's valuable paper with great interest. Few of the present generation of American steel metallurgists are aware of the very importan
Jan 1, 1894
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Utilization Of By-Products Of Stone Industry In GeorgiaBy Nelson Severinghaus
FOLLOWING the end of hostilities of World War II, a resurgence of industrial and home building has given impetus to the use of many products of the stone industry. Shortage and high prices of some bui
Jan 1, 1947
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Part XI – November 1969 - Papers - The Electromagnetic Levitation of Liquid Metal Sulfides and Their Reaction in OxygenBy A. E. Jenkins, O. C. Roberts, D. G. C. Robertson
Using an inverted-cone coil at 450 kHz, it has been possible to levitate iron (FeS), cobalt (CoS), and nickel (NiS) sulfides. Important nontransition metal sulfides such as ZnS, PbS, and Cu2S have pro
Jan 1, 1970
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Metal Mining - Underground Deep-hole Prospecting at the Eagle-Picher MinesBy W. F. Netzeband
Jan 1, 1927
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Damp Mineral and its Effect on Block Caving With Gravity TransferBy Torres S. Ricardo, Encina M. Víctor, Segura O. Claudio
INTRODUCTION This paper is a conceptual resume of engineering studies that have been evaluated by the Mine Department related to production planning over the next twenty-five years. These stud
Jan 1, 1981
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Institute of Metals Division - Central Region of the Mg-Zn Phase DiagramBy J. B. Clark, F. N. Rhines
brittlement or notch sensitivity progressively increases. Further, in contrast to results obtained with the impact test, the notch strength for the large specimens does not reveal a 500°F embrittlemen
Jan 1, 1958
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Rare Earths And ThoriumBy Spencer S. Shannon
The lanthanide elements from lanthanum (atomic number 57) to lutetium (71) plus yttrium (39) are called the rare-earth elements; scandium (21) is chemically similar to yttrium and the lanthanides, but
Jan 1, 1983
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The Mid-Continent Petroleum SituationBy Joseph B. Umpleby
WHEN the Cushing field flooded the oil market in 1914 and 1915 with a daily output equal to nearly one-third of the world's production, the situation was soon corrected by increased consumption,
Jan 1, 1924