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Developments in the Production of Arsenic at AnacondaBy E. A. Barnard
ARSENIC is a very old substance. The ancients speak of it in their writings, and its use has developed very little until recent years. The ancients used it in making pigments, in medicine, and for poi
Jan 8, 1923
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - A Critical Review of Sulfation EquilibriaBy H. H. Kellogg
Available high-fernperatzwe equilibrium measurements and other thermochernical data have been critically reciewed for sulfation reactions of the type: Recommended values for log K and ?Fo as junc
Jan 1, 1964
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The Mineral Wealth Of Southwestern VirginiaBy C. R. Boyd
WITHOUT attempting to do more than give a preliminary or skeleton report upon the geology and minerals of Southwestern Virginia at this time, I am led to hope that the great commercial importance of t
Jan 1, 1877
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Papers - - Production - Domestic - Texas - Oil and Gas Production in WyomingBy J. G. Bartram
Jan 1, 1934
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Papers - Production - Foregin - Petroleum and Gas in Iran during 1937Gach-Saran.—The most important development of 1937 has been the successful completion of initial exploratory wells in the Gach Saran (formerly known as Gach-i-Qaraghuli) field, about 125 miles southea
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - New Method for Welding Together Ferrous Metals by Application of Nest and Pressure (With Discussion)By Leonard C. Grimshaw
The idea of bonding two dissimilar ferrous metals, and making use of both, is an old one. Tips have been brazed onto tool shanks for many years. The bonding of larger pieces to form whole bars and she
Jan 1, 1936
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Papers - New Method for Welding Together Ferrous Metals by Application of Nest and Pressure (With Discussion)By Leonard C. Grimshaw
The idea of bonding two dissimilar ferrous metals, and making use of both, is an old one. Tips have been brazed onto tool shanks for many years. The bonding of larger pieces to form whole bars and she
Jan 1, 1936
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Tariffs And Exhaustible ResourcesBy J. W. Furness
Before attempting any discussion of the importance of tariff enactments as applied to exhaustible resources, certain basic factors should be emphasized. First, it must be remembered that minerals diff
Jan 1, 1932
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Technical Notes - Chemical Polishing of Pure ZincBy V. J. Decarlo, J. J. Gilman
POLISHING pure zinc differs somewhat from polishing less reactive metals. The problem is not that of finding a suitable reagent, but rather of producing the polish in such a way that the surface remai
Jan 1, 1957
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Detection of Oxidized Coal and the Effect of Oxidation on the Technological PropertiesBy A. H. Rhoades, D. T. King, R. J. Gray
Tests and methods of detecting oxidized coal are studied. Particular emphasis is placed on the microscopically discernible changes that accompany the chemical and physical changes affecting the techno
Jan 1, 1977
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New York Paper - A Development of Practical Substitutes for Platinum and Its Alloys, with Special Reference to Alloys of Tungsten and Molybdenum (with Discussion)By Frank Alfred Fahrenwald
MetallURgical research has discovered many an alloy possessing properties not combined in any single metal, and progress still consists chiefly in the investigation and utilization of alloys. In the c
Jan 1, 1916
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Papers - Handling and Utilization - Use of Illinois Coal in the Production of Metallurgical Coke (T.P. 2491, Coal Tech., Nov. 1948)By Frank H. Reed, P. W. Henline, Harold W. Jackman
A sumMary of the consumption of coal in 1945 shows that the coke industry ac-counted for 17 pct of the total coal used. No substitute for coke and the blast furnace in the reduction of iron ore has ga
Jan 1, 1949
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OhioAs already said Pattin's map and the later one of Evans' showed coal in several places in Ohio as early as 1750, and possibly 1748; the reference on the latter map was' to an exposure n
Jan 1, 1942
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Structure and Ore Deposition at Cartersville, Georgia (1659dbd1-021c-4e6b-985e-0cf7356a2f49)By Thomas Kesler
THE Cartersville mining district, 35 miles northwest of Atlanta, Ga., has been of varying but continuous importance in the southern mineral industry during the past century. Noted chiefly for its prod
Jan 1, 1940
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Part VII – July 1968 - Papers - Fatigue Behavior of TitaniumBy W. T. Roberts, N. G. Turner
A study of the fatigue properties of several grades of commercially pure titanium has established that the strain-aging process is of minor importance in the development of a fatigue limit and a relat
Jan 1, 1969
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Tensile Properties of Rail Steels at Elevated TemperaturesBy G. Willard Quick
FAILURES in railroad rails have been of vital concern to engineers; railroad executives, rail manufacturers and the general public for years. Failures from transverse fissures originating from interna
Jan 1, 1932
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Various Phases of Activity in Iron and Steel Reviewed ? IntroductionBy John A. Gann
THE Iron and Steel Division has shared in the general increased activity of the industry. The fall meeting at Chicago was not only well attended but particularly characterized by the virility and scop
Jan 1, 1936
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Scranton Paper - Geology and Mining in the Northern Coal-Field of PennsylvaniaBy Frank A. Hill
A visitor to the Northern anthracite coal-field in 1844 wrote: " History and song have hallowed the valley of Wyoming, and everything pertaining to it seems wrapped in an atmosphere of romance." So
Jan 1, 1887
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St. Joseph Lead Company's New Mining , ShovelBy Arthur Mitchell
POSSIBLY in no other of the non-ferrous mining districts of this country has the use and develop-ment of mechanical loaders been carried to such an extent as in the "lead belt" of Southeast Missouri.
Jan 4, 1923