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The Chief Consolidated Volatilization Process And MillBy G. H. Wigton
THE oxidized ores of the Chief Consolidated Mining Co., in the Tintic mining district, have never yielded to metallurgical treatment by any standard method except smelting. These ores occur in compara
Jan 8, 1925
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Transportation Of Molten Blister Copper By Rail From Smelter To RefineryBy Frederic Benard
PRIOR to 1936, the Ontario Refining Co. received all incoming blister copper from The International Nickel Company's smelter in the usual form of 460-lb. cakes, or slabs. These were received in o
Jan 1, 1938
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Barite Little-Known Industry That Means "Mud" To Oil MenBy Earl L. H. Sackett
Barite, although not a glamour mineral and probably little known to many of those in the mining business, is produced in the US. in very respectable quantities and is an important factor in the minera
Jan 5, 1962
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Technical Notes - Improved Methods for Measuring Aeration in Flotation CellsBy J. B. Gayle
PRESENT flotation processes depend almost entirely on the buoyant properties of air bubbles to effect separations of mineral and gangue, but there is no convenient method for measuring aeration in flo
Jan 1, 1959
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Iron and Steel Division - The Effect of Oxygen Pressure on the Solubility of Water in Slags Containing Iron Oxide (TN)By J. M. Uys, T. B. King
WalSH, Chipman, King, and rant' have measured the water content (as hydrogen) of actual steel-making slags. An average water content of 290 ppm was found for basic open-hearth tapping slags an
Jan 1, 1963
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Effect Of Antimony On Some Properties Of 70-30 BrassBy H. F. Silliman, Daniel R. Hull, Earl W. Palmer
THE brass-rolling industry has not had a great deal of experience with antimony in its product. There have been some recent excursions with antimony as a corrosion inhibitor in tubes, but in sheet bra
Jan 1, 1943
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Alaskan Coals May Prove a Big Plus in Future Exports PictureBy Cleland N. Conwell
Coals are found in all parts of Alaska, ranging in geologic age from Carboniferous to Tertiary, and grading from lignite through anthracite. Only the Matanuska and Nenana coal fields have been extensi
Jan 10, 1972
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Technical Notes - Frontal Drive Production Mechanisms - A New Method for Calculating the Displacing Fluid Saturation at BreakthroughBy L. F. Stutzman, George Thodos
A new graphical method, which is a modification of that proposed by Buckley and Leverett', is presented for the determination of the displacing fluid saturation at breakthrough for frontal drive
Jan 1, 1958
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Rock Mechanics Studies In A Mechanized Longwall Coal MineBy Paul H. Lu
Methods and results of measuring three basic parameters for ground stability control, ground pressure, strata movement, and geomechanical properties of mine rock are presented in this paper. It is fou
Jan 1, 1984
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Tarnish Films on CopperBy J. B. Dyess
TARNISH films on some of the common metals (particularly on copper and silver) have been of much scientific and commercial concern for a long time, but before the development of the electrical method1
Jan 1, 1939
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Drilling and Producing – Equipment, Methods, and Materials - Effectiveness of Gun PerforatingBy T. O. Allen, J. H. Atterbury
Laboratory and field tests during the past five years indicated considerable variation in the penetrating power of commercially available gun perforators. Many of the guns which achieved inadequate pe
Jan 1, 1955
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Technical Notes - A Simplified Air Pycnometer to Facilitate Powder CharacterizationBy W. A. Hockings, D. W. Fuerstenau, A. L. Mular
This paper briefly describes a simple air pycno-meter and its use for rapid determination of the composition of mixtures of solid particles. Research on such problems as the pelletizing of solids,
Jan 1, 1963
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Underground Mining - Percussive Wear Properties of Cemented CarbidesBy R. S. Montgomery
Laboratory experiments simulating rock drilling were conducted on a number of commercial grades of tungsten carbide in order to determine their wear rates when they are used as inserts in percussive r
Jan 1, 1970
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Slurry Transport of Industrial MineralsBy James M. Link
Slurry transport of industrial minerals has proven to be practical, economical, and efficient. Industrial minerals currently being pumped for long distances include cement, clay, phosphate, sand, and
Jan 1, 1974
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Vertical Slice And Slot Stoping At ButteBy L. F. Bishop
THE ore bodies of the Butte district1 are found in many different vein systems having many different structural characteristics; some are narrow with self-supporting ore but with weak walls; some are
Jan 1, 1945
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Technical Notes - Mechanism of Sulfate Formation During the Roasting of Cuprous SulfideBy J. A. Morgan
IN the art of roasting sulfides it is well known that the lower the temperature and the higher the pressure of SO, the larger will be the amount of sulfate present in the product. However, the mechani
Jan 1, 1957
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Design Of Permanent Block Stopping To Resist Strata ConvergenceBy R. E. Ray, J. W. Stevenson, J. A. Berry
Conventional concrete block plastered with a cementitious coating is the most common material used in the construction of permanent stoppings to direct airflow in underground mines in the US. All mine
Jan 1, 1986
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Metal and Nonmetal Mine Blasting Accidents During 1975-76By Jack G. Gill, Richard A. Dick
Blasting safety is a subject that cannot be overemphasized. Two years ago, a study was published describing g a series of fatal blasting accidents which took the lives of ten metal and nonmetal miners
Jan 11, 1977