Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
-
Certain Ore Shoots On Warped Fault PlanesBy W. H. Emmons
MANY mineral veins occupy faults, and movements on certain warped fault planes have resulted in openings. On normal faults the [ ] steeper parts have the widest openings, and on reverse faults the
Jan 1, 1943
-
Research Opportunities Offered by U. S. Colleges ? Many Scholarships, Assistantships, and Fellowships in Mineral Technology AvailableBy Sheldon P. Wimpfen
RESEARCH is undertaken to find out what must be done when what we are doing now is no longer adequate. To accomplish this end, researchers apply the truths of nature to industrial evolution. A survey
Jan 1, 1947
-
Manufacture And Properties Of Light-Wall Structural TubingBy H. J. French
WITHIN the past few years, particularly because of the rapid growth of the airplane industry during the war, considerable attention has been paid to the manufacture of light-wall cold-drawn seamless a
Jan 9, 1919
-
Institute of Metals Division - Faults in the Structure of Copper-Silicon AlloysBy C. S. Barrett
THE crystal imperfections known as faults in stacking (stacking disorder) are of importance to both fundamental and applied science and are receiving increasing attention. On the theoretical side ther
Jan 1, 1951
-
Geology - Occurrence of Mineral Deposits in the Pegmatites of the Karibib-Omaruru and Orange River Areas of South West AfricaBy Eugene N. Cameron
Pegmatites of these areas have become important sources of beryl and lepidolite and have yielded cassiterite, columbite-tantalite, and other minerals. Examination of about 60 of these pegmatites leads
Jan 1, 1956
-
Melting Practice For Lead And Lead AlloysBy Albert J. Phillips
LEAD is an inexpensive metal produced and consumed in large quantities with certain chemical and physical properties that permit handling the molten metal in bulk. These properties are its low melting
Jan 1, 1946
-
Institute of Metals Division - Oxidation of Refractory Metals as a Function of Pressure, Temperature, and Time: Tantalum in OxygenBy J. N. Ong
The oxidation of tantalum is assumed to occur by four simultaneous first-order chain reactions; solution of oxygen in the metal, nucleation and growth of a suboxide phase at the metal surface and two
Jan 1, 1962
-
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
-
Part VIII – August 1968 - Papers - The Effect of Ferromagnetism upon Creep Deformation of Alpha Iron and Its Solid-Solution AlloysBy T. Watanabe, S. Karashima, H. Oikawa
Creep tests of a! iron and its solid-solution Fe-Mo, Fe-Co, and Fe-Si alloys with bcc structure were conducted under constant stresses in ferromagnetic and paramagnetic temperature regions above 0.5T,
Jan 1, 1969
-
Minerals Beneficiation - Practical Design Considerations for High Tension Belt Conveyor InstallationsBy J. W. Snavely
THE high tension belt conveyor is introducing a new and tremendously expanded era of low cost bulk material handling. High tension belt conveyors are generally those installations involving very long
Jan 1, 1952
-
Institute of Metals Division - Dendritic Crystallization of AlloysBy F. N. Rhines, B. H. Alexander
MUCH attention has been directed to the effects of grain size upon the properties of alloys, but there has been scant study either of the conditions that determine the pattern and dimensions of den-dr
Jan 1, 1951
-
Physical Chemistry Of High-Temperature ReactionsOF the many categories into which scientific knowledge has been arbitrarily divided, the one that has proved most applicable in our attempts to gain an insight into the details of steelmaking processe
Jan 1, 1951
-
Production Engineering and Research - Selective Adsorption of Hydrocarbon and Water Vapor on Alumina at Atmospheric Pressure (T.P. 1628, Petr. Tech., Nov. 1943)By L. S. Reid, R. L. Huntington, Chen Chun Ku
The simultaneous adsorption of water and hydrocarbon vapor from natural gas by three grades of alumina has been studied at atmospheric pressure and temperature. Results of this investigation reveal th
Jan 1, 1944
-
Production Engineering and Research - Selective Adsorption of Hydrocarbon and Water Vapor on Alumina at Atmospheric Pressure (T.P. 1628, Petr. Tech., Nov. 1943)By R. L. Huntington, L. S. Reid, Chen Chun Ku
The simultaneous adsorption of water and hydrocarbon vapor from natural gas by three grades of alumina has been studied at atmospheric pressure and temperature. Results of this investigation reveal th
Jan 1, 1944
-
Productivity In Mining Pitching Seams Of The Canadian RockiesVARYING in thickness and in number from place to place, coal seams in the Canadian Rockies also range in pitch from nearly horizontal to vertical, sometimes with overturns. Over the entire coal-bearin
Jan 8, 1954
-
Western Pennsylvania: 1810-1831Mills Day left a journal of his travel to Ohio and return by way of Pittsburgh in 1810. He left this comment about western Pennsylvania: "June 19. As I proceeded toward Pittsburg, (From Washington
Jan 1, 1942
-
Power Plant Ash – A Neglected AssetBy Gerard C. Gambs
The electric utility industry is the largest customer of the U.S. coal industry, consuming nearly 50% of present coal production. By 1980, the electric utilities are expected to burn over 500 million
Jan 1, 1967
-
Production - Foreign - Production of Oil in Egypt in 1936 - information received through the courtesy of the Controller of the Egyptian Department of Mines and Quarries, Dawawin P. O., Egypt. Figures received Feb. 2, 1937The Hurghada field is still the major producing field in Egypt. There was almost no activity in the Abu Durba field during 1936 and no new evidence is available. The following table summarizes the inf
Jan 1, 1937
-
Reservoir Engineering-General - Pressure Build-Up Analysis, Variable-Rate CaseBy F. Selig, A. S. Odeh
A second-order approximation to the exact solution of the diffusivity equation corresponding to the pressure build-up of a well producing at a variable rate is derived. This approximation is applicabl
-