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Petroleum Refining Industry Ready to Meet Phenomenal Demand Made on ItBy Walter Miller
ALTHOUGH confident of its ability to meet any demands which may be made, the petroleum refining industry is not complacent about the situation and realizes that the quantities of petroleum products to
Jan 1, 1942
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Milling Practice At Morning MillBy M. P. Dalton
THE problem at the Morning mill is to separate the galena, which contains a great percentage of the silver, from the sphalerite, making each into a commercial product. The ore as received from the nin
Jan 7, 1927
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Industrial Minerals - Progress in Materials for House Insulation a Feature of the YearBy Oliver Bowles
EACH year the broad diversified field of industrial minerals offers a panorama of new and interesting developments that not only concern the welfare of the industries themselves but have a more or les
Jan 1, 1937
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Discussion - Ultimate Pit Limit Design Methodologics Using Computer Models - The State of the Art – Kim, Young C. – Technical Papers, MINING ENGINEERING, Vol. 30, No. 10, October 1978, pp. 1454-1459By R. L. Sandefur
Professor Kim's excellent review article1 on ultimate pit planning contains a statement of the apparently widely held but incorrect belief that "kriging provides information on the confidence lim
Jan 1, 1980
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Lead Refined Electrolytically at the East Chicago PlantBy F. C. Smyers, E. W. Merrick
ALTHOUGH the zinc and pyrite concentrates produced at Midvale go to other companies, the United States Smelting Refining and Mining Company smelts and refines its own lead. Refining is the first step
Jan 1, 1948
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Part I – January 1968 - Communications - The Preparation of Fine Recrystallized Tungsten Wire for Transmission Electron MicroscopyBy E. F. Koch, J. L. Walter
In a study of the structure and properties of tungsten wire used for lamp filaments, it became desirable to perform transmission electron microscopy on the wire in the annealed as well as in the drawn
Jan 1, 1969
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The Wire Saw as a Tool for Cutting Slate and Building StoneBy Oliver Bowles
WHEN a new type of equipment revolutionizes methods of quarrying one kind of stone, producers of other kinds focus their attention on its potentialities in their particular fields. The purpose of this
Jan 1, 1936
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The Zinc-Iron-Manganese Ore Bodies Of Franklin And Sterling Hill, Sussex County, New JerseyBy R. W. Metsger
The metamorphic zinc-iron-manganese ore in the Grenvillian rocks of the Reading Prong m Sussex County, N.J. is unique. The singularity of its mineral composition and associations has fueled controvers
Jan 1, 1985
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Gold Dredging in the Urals, with Notes on Dredging in SiberiaBy William H. Shockley
[SECRETARY'S ]NOTE.-The following notes, arranged and edited in this office, but not yet revised by the author, were placed at my disposal with much modest hesitation (due to their incomplete and
Jul 1, 1906
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Coal Utilization Makes Progress With New Stoves, Stokers and Coal-Oil MixturesBy Martin A. Moyers
THE nation's effort to win the war speedily is reflected in current trends in coal utilization, as in all other fields of our lives. In all industries, wherever coal is used for the production of
Jan 1, 1943
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Gold Mining And MillingBy Nathaniel Hen
IN the United States, in the 2 1/2 years since the rescinding of the wartime order closing gold mines, conditions have not yet returned to normal. Shortages of man power have prevented some mines from
Jan 1, 1948
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Institute of Metals Division - The Hardening Mechanism in Nitralloy-N Steel (TN)By H. J. Beattie, G. C. Gould
J. B. Seabrook' recently published properties of a low-alloy Ni-A1 age-hardening steel known commercially as "Nitralloy-N". He mentioned three possible mechanisms of age hardening, viz. order-dis
Jan 1, 1962
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Institute of Metals Division - The Effect of Procedures in Quantitative Metallography for Volume-Fraction AnalysisBy John W. Cahn, John E. Hilliard
Single crystals of copper and silicon-iron were cold rolled in orientations chosen to produce individually the major components of the poly crystalline deformation texture. The orientation dependence
Jan 1, 1962
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Experimental Beneficiation of Michigan Iron-Bearing FormationsBy Frank J. Tolonen
BENEFICIATION of iron-bearing formations is one of the major problems of research at the Michigan College of Mining arid Technology. Funds for this purpose hate been supplied by the State of Michigan
Jan 1, 1937
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Discussions - Institute of Metals Division (page 1560)J. D. Fast and J. L. Meijering (Philips Research Laboratories, N. V. Philips' Gloeilampenfabrieken, Eindhoven, Netherlands)— After the departure of our friend Dijkstra to the United States, inves
Jan 1, 1954
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U. S. Foreign Policy for OilBy George A. Miller
THE outstanding characteristic of the American business man is that he likes to run his own business his own way, without any interference from his wife, his friends, his bankers, and least of all fro
Jan 1, 1944
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Part III - Papers - Vapor-Phase Growth of GaAs1-xPx Room-Temperature Injection LasersBy I. J. Hegyi, J. J. Tietjen, H. Nelson, J. I. Pankove
The fabrication of p-n junctions in GaAsl-,P, alloys by a vapor-phase gowth technique has for the first tirne resulted in room-temperature injection lasers capable of operating over a broad range of w
Jan 1, 1968
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Institute of Metals Division - Properties of Chromium Boride and Sintered Chromium Boride - DiscussionBy S. J. Sindeband
J. WULFF*—It seems to me that the author could improve the quality of his high temperature material by using less nickel as a cementing agent in hot pressing. Furthermore, to avoid the presence of und
Jan 1, 1950
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Officers and Directors (9bbd7f01-00bc-4bf0-9ea0-06133fe6415b)PRESIDENT AND DIRECTOR JOHN M. LOVEJOY NEW YORK, N. Y. PAST PRESIDENTS AND DIRECTORS HOWARD N. EAVENSON PITTSBURGH, PA. HENRY A. BUEHLER ROLLA, Mo. VICE-PRESIDENT, TREASURER AND DIRECTOR KARL EI
Jan 1, 1936
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Institute of Metals Division - The High-Temperature Allotropy of Some Heavy Rare-Earth MetalsBy A. H. Duane, A. E. Miller
The high-temperature allotropy of some heavy rare-earth metals and their alloying behavior with magnesium in the 0 to 50 at. pct Mg region was studied by thermal, microscopic, and X-ray methods. Exami
Jan 1, 1964