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Concentration - Electrostatic Separation - The Electrostatic Separation of Several Industrial Minerals (Mining Tech., July 1948, TP 2408, with discussion)By Oliver C. Ralston, Foster Fraas
Electrostatic methods of separation are used only when some peculiar advantage is gained. Such cases are minerals that are not separable by differences in specific gravity or magnetic response and
Jan 1, 1949
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in Utah, 1936By E. W. Henderson
Oil and gas development in Utah in 1936 added nothing of importance to the commercial possibilities of the state and consisted principally of efforts to reach objectives in wildcat wells started prior
Jan 1, 1937
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Resistance of Iron-aluminum Alloys to Oxidation at High TemperaturesBy N. A. Ziegler
A CERTAIN amount of interest has been indicated recently in the resistance to oxidation at high temperatures of iron-aluminum alloys (rich in iron). Hautman1 published a paper in which some interestin
Jan 1, 1932
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Roanoke, Va. Paper - The Copper Deposits of the South MountainBy C. Hanford Henderson
The belt of copper-bearing rocks of the South Mountain has attracted Attention principally iii the townships of Hamilton Ban and Liberty in Adams County, Pennsylvania, and in the southeastern portion
Jan 1, 1884
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Potential Injury Reduction Through Use Of Diesel Equipment: An Analysis Of Electrical Injuries (abdc63bf-f4db-4cf2-98ca-b9b384be3f26)By D. L. Passmore, J. D. Bennett
The degree of injury and days lost from work due to an injury are examined for selected electrical sources, occurring in conjunction with falls of the injured miner or with selected machinery, that co
Jan 1, 1986
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Magcobar - Mud Is Their Business - Supply Of Vital Drilling Fluid Depends On Mining OperationBy Tommy Wilson
OIL well drilling fluids have become a vital part of the drilling industry during the past 25 years. From chance usage of drilling mud at the fabulous Splindletop field in 1901, drilling fluid control
Jan 5, 1954
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Stiff-Backfilled Stope--Instrumentation Plans With Initial ResultsBy K. Stout, E. Van Eeckhout, L. Friel
Previous research at the Montana College of Mineral Science and Technology indicated that it is practical and economically feasible to place stiff back- fill in a cut-and-fill stope. This backfill wou
Jan 1, 1984
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Technical Notes - Strain Aging of AISI 4340By H. W. Paxton, C. C. Busby
IT has been shown previously' that strain aging can markedly improve the tensile properties of low carbon martensites, especially the yield-tensile ratio, without seriously affecting the
Jan 1, 1957
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Production - Foreign - Petroleum in India and Burma in 1937The production of petroleum in India (including Burma) increased from 334,811,624 gal.' ill 1936 to 350,322,222 gal. in 1937, the highest figure in the history of the industry. The increase in 19
Jan 1, 1939
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Oil Developments In Canada During 1923By G. S. Hume
In Alberta, an oil well with an estimated capacity of 60 to 100 bbl. was "brought in" at Wainwright, the oil being derived from the Colorado group of rocks. In the Norman fields, Mackenzie River area,
Jan 2, 1924
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Production - Foreign - Petroleum in India and Burma in 1937The production of petroleum in India (including Burma) increased from 334,811,624 gal.' ill 1936 to 350,322,222 gal. in 1937, the highest figure in the history of the industry. The increase in 19
Jan 1, 1939
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Effect of Atmospheric Moisture on the Deterioration of Coal Mine Roof Shales (f0f4c6f7-1a99-4987-b4da-f847b6540db6)By R. A. Cummings, N. N. Moebs, M. M. Singh
Disintegration of the immediate shale roof in coal mines interferes with ventilation, production, and safety. The effect is seasonal and correlates with high levels of moisture in the intake ventilati
Jan 1, 1984
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Timbering in the Butte Mines. (d92635b0-b7ca-4742-b05d-370da8242086)Discussion of the paper of B. H. Dunshee, presented at the Butte meeting, August, 1913, and printed in Bulletin No. 30, August, 1913, pp. 1511 to 1531. GEORGE E. MOULTHROP, Butte, Mont.:-The recordin
Jan 11, 1913
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Refinery SecurityBy R. S. Shoemaker, F. W. McQuiston
REFINERY SECURITY "Highgrading, " a polite word for stealing gold and silver, has been a way of life since the metals in native form have been mined or produced. Unfortunately, in the past, highgr
Jan 1, 1975
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Technical Papers and Notes - Institute of Metals Division - On the Use of Furnaces in the Measurement of the Rate of Oxidation of Platinum and other Metals Forming Volatile OxidesBy G. C. Fryburg, H. M. Murphy
ThE rates of oxidation of metals are usually obtained by heating the metal specimens in furnaces. Such a procedure is satisfactory for most metals. However, there are several metals that oxidize ac
Jan 1, 1959
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Technical Notes - Phase Transformations in Titanium-Rich Alloys of Titanium and ManganeseBy B. F. Peters, J. Gordon Parr, E. R. Macgregor
A SERIES of seven hypoeutectoid alloys, up to 18.2 atomic pct Mn, was made by the levitation melting technique. The loss of weight on melting was considered to be entirely due to volatilization of
Jan 1, 1957
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Sulphur Dioxide As An Agent In Fighting Mine-Fires.By Walter O. Snelling
IN combating mine-fires the use of carbon dioxide as a means of producing an atmosphere in which combustion cannot be sustained, has been many times suggested and frequently tried, generally with a fa
Sep 1, 1908
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Index (f4e0cfeb-cc7c-4451-afcf-52af07abf6b9)Jan 1, 1891
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Atlantic City Paper - Sulphide-Smelting at the National Smelter of the Horseshoe Mining Co., Rapid City, S. D.By Theodor Knutzen, Charles H. Fulton
The plant of the National Smelting Co., a corporation controlled by the Horseshoe Mining Co., was built during 1901 to smelt the dry siliceous ores of the northern Black Hills, extracting the gold- an
Jan 1, 1905
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First Year of Leaching by the New Cornelia Copper Co.-DiscussionC. A. ROSE, New York, N. Y. (written discussion *).-Without doubt the excellent results obtained at Ajo will cause surprise among metallurgists; 75 per cent. average capacity and 80 per cent. extracti
Jan 4, 1919