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Minerals Beneficiation - Developments in the Application of Activated Carbon to Cyanidation Including the Desorption of Gold and Silver from CarbonsBy E. H. Crabtree, T. G. Chapman, V. W. Winters
IN 1939 one of the authors* described advances in carbon-cyanidation for the period 1932 to 1939 • T. G. Chapman: A Cyanide Process Based on the Simultaneous Dissolution and Adsorption of Gold. Tr
Jan 1, 1951
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Shot Firing in Coal Mines by Electric Circuit from the Surface (8844cea8-7ebc-4517-a257-1fabf2e0f14e)Discussion of the paper of GEORGE S. RICE and H. H. CLARK, presented at the Pittsburgh meeting, October, 1914, and printed in Bulletin No. 94, October, 1914, pp. 2563 to 2571. NORMAN V. BRETH,* Pitts
Jan 4, 1915
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Capillarity – Permeability - Relative Permeability Calculations from Pore Size Distribution DataBy N. T. Burdine
Formulas for calculating relative permeability from pore size distribution data are derived from basic laws of fluid flow ill porous media. The tortuosity factors that appear in the equation5 are desc
Jan 1, 1953
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Measurement of Ordinary House VibrationsBy J. R. Thoenen
Six or seven years age the United States Bureau of Nines started development of instruments for the purpose of accurately measuring the vibrational movement of the earth in the vicinity of quarry blas
Jan 1, 1937
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Manganese For National DefenseFOREWORD A SERIES of papers on strategic and otherwise important mineral products was prepared some ten years ago under the joint auspices of the Committee on Foreign and Domestic Mining Policy of th
Jan 1, 1933
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BlastingBy Joseph S. Malesky
The discovery and development of explosives mark one of the most important findings in the history of civilization. Without explosives our vast economic enterprise concerning the mining of coal, coppe
Jan 1, 1981
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Engineering Societies Joint ActivitiesThis fund was established in 1929 for support of research and especially refers to non-ferrous mining and metallurgy. It is administered under the Board by a committee consisting of the President and
Jan 1, 1929
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A Hot-Wire Anemometer With ThermocoupleBy T. S. Taylor
THE development of the linear hot-wire anemometer has been chiefly clue to the efforts of L. V. Kings1 and A. E. Kennelly and H. S. Sanborn.2 The anemometers used by these investigators consisted esse
Jan 9, 1919
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Montreal (Annual) Paper - A Variable-Speed PulleyBy H. C. Spaulding
Every constructing engineer and designer knows how often it is desirable to provide a speed-adjustment between parts of a machine performing different functions, or between a prime mover and the devic
Jan 1, 1893
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The Method Of Making Common Parting Acid.IF you wish to make the acid that is vulgarly called common aqua fortis,* for parting gold from silver, you must first provide as many cucurbits and alembics, receivers, and materials as you wish, and
Jan 1, 1942
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The North Staffordshire Coal and Iron DistrictBy Wm. Hamilton Merritt
IN this paper, which I have the honor to submit to the Institute, it is my intention to treat especially of that part of the North Staffordshire field which converges to a long tongue in the neighborh
Jan 1, 1880
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New York Paper - The North Staffordshire Coal and Iron DistrictBy William Hamilton Merritt
In this paper, which I have the honor to submit to the Institute, it is my intention to treat especially of that part of the North Staffordshire field which converges to a long tongue in the neighborh
Jan 1, 1880
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Institute of Metals Division - The Solubility of Niobium (Columbium) Nitride in Gamma Iron (TN)By Rodney P. Smith
THE solubility of columbium nitride in ? iron has been determined for the temperature range 1191o to 1336°C from the nitrogen content and metallogra-phic examination of a series of Fe-Nb alloys.* (
Jan 1, 1962
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Papers - Microscopic Study of Ancient Bronze and Copper (With Discussion)By C. G. Fink, E. P. Polushkin
A PART of the material incorporated in this paper was derived from the studies of ancient metal objects examined by the authors from time to time for museums and art collectors, in order to verify the
Jan 1, 1936
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Reduction of Iron Ores under Pressure by HydrogenBy Michael Tenenbaum
RECENT researches on the reduction of iron ores have stimulated interest in the effect of increased pressures within the iron blast furnace. From a physicochemical viewpoint, it seems logical to suppo
Jan 1, 1939
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Examples of Bauxite Deposits Illustrating Variations in OriginBy E. C. Harder
CERTAIN typical characteristics of bauxites, ores of aluminum permit their classification into a number of categories, each of which has special features that enable grouping within it deposits from w
Jan 1, 1952
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Isothermal Transformation Of Austenite In One Per Cent Carbon, High-Chromium SteelsBy Lyman Taylor, Alexander R. Troiano
STUDIES of the transformation of austenite at constant subcritical temperatures have been numerous since the work of Davenport and Bain.1 Considerable information has been obtained on low-alloy steels
Jan 1, 1945
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Symposia - Symposium on Powder Metallurgy - A Study of the Physical Properties and Microstructure of Sintered Steels (Metals Tech., Aug. 1946, T. P. 2045, with discussion)By George Stern
The purpose of this investigation has been to study one method for making ordinary carbon steel by the powder metallurgy technique. This method con- sists of pressing and subsequently sinterin
Jan 1, 1946
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Symposia - Symposium on Powder Metallurgy - A Study of the Physical Properties and Microstructure of Sintered Steels (Metals Tech., Aug. 1946, T. P. 2045, with discussion)By George Stern
The purpose of this investigation has been to study one method for making ordinary carbon steel by the powder metallurgy technique. This method con- sists of pressing and subsequently sinterin
Jan 1, 1946
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Papers - Metallographic Study of Internal Oxidation in the Alpha Solid Solutions of Copper (T. P. 1162, with discussion)By Frederick N. Rhines
Pure copper that has been allowed to oxidize at an elevated temperature in the air is found to be covered with two distinguishable layers of oxide scale. The outer of these, which is very thin, is com
Jan 1, 1940