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What Duty to Support the Surface Does a Subsurface Owner Owe? (ac77f398-14ce-419b-9790-907668f7e461)By Robert Bosworth
THE liability for damages to the surface caused by subsidence is an ever present threat in all underground mining. In ordinary lode mining, this threat rarely materializes into an action, due to the m
Jan 1, 1928
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Papers - Critical Studies of a Modified Ledebur Method for Determination of Oxygen in Steel (With Discussion)By B. M. Larsen, T. E. Brower
An increasing amount of attention is being paid to the possible influence of oxygen, in its several modes of occurrence in steel, upon some of the properties of the metal; but clearly investigations a
Jan 1, 1932
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Silicon-Oxygen Equilibria In Liquid Iron (c95210d3-cc72-47f1-9b1e-4c5cdd3791a3)By C. E. Sims, C. A. Zapffe
AN investigation of the behavior of inclusions in steel several years ago1 led to the conclusion that some of the commonly occurring inclusions in steel have appreciable solubilities, particularly in
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Production of Gray Iron from Steel Scrap in the Electric Furnace (With Discussion)By T. F. Baily
During the period of the war, in both this country and Canada, a number of attempts were made to make pig iron from steel scrap in the electric furnace, and a considerable tonnage of white pig iron
Jan 1, 1930
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Industrial Minerals - Simple And Sophisticated - AggregatesBy J. K. Brooke, F. A. Renninger
During 1966, crushed stone production in the United States totaled just over 811 million tons valued at almost $1.2 billion. This represented in- creases of 4 % in tonnage and 5 % in value over that f
Jan 2, 1968
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Plastic Deformation Of MetalsBy J. T. Norton
As cold working is an important feature in a great many of the fabricating processes now applied, this paper presents some ideas of the nature and results of the plastic deformation produced in this o
Jan 12, 1926
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Magnesium Alloys - A Study of Factors Influencing Grain Size in Magnesium Alloys and a Carbon Inoculation Method for Grain Refinement (Metals Technology, June 1945) (With discussion)By C. H. Mahoney, A. L. Tarr, P. E. Le Grand
Magnesium, it is now generally realized, differs in some important aspects from most other structural metals, not excepting even its close neighbors, the aluminum-base alloys. This is particularly tru
Jan 1, 1945
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Recent Improvements In PyrometryBy R. P. Brown
To gain some idea of the progress recently made in the measurement of high temperatures, we must review the temperature-measuring devices of the past. As far back as 1782, Wedgewood, a famous potter i
Jan 9, 1919
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New York Paper - A Study in Refining and Overpoling Electrolytic CopperBy H. O. Hofman
The object of refining copper in the reverberatory furnace is to obtain a metal which will have the highest attainable degree of malleability, ductility and electric conductivity, and present at the s
Jan 1, 1908
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The Roles Of Stress Wave And Gas Pressure In PresplittingBy Herbert K. Kutter
This paper is concerned with the physical phenomena in the fracture process of presplitting and only indirectly with the establishment of the optimum presplitting parameters. Its nature is therefore q
Jan 1, 1968
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Kick .Vs. Rittinger : An Experimental Investigation In Rock Crushing, Performed At Purdue UniversityBy Arthur Gates
INTRODUCTION RITTINGER'S law of the energy expended in crushing is, as roughly stated by Professor Richards,1 that the work of crushing is proportional to the reduction in diameter; or, as I hav
Jan 9, 1915
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St. Louis Paper - Relation of Sulphur to Variation in the Gravity of California Petroleum (with Discussion)By G. Sherburne Rogers
One of the features of oil-field work that puzzles operator, chemist, and geologist alike, is variation in the gravity of the petroleum produced on neighboring leases or even from adjoining wells. Few
Jan 1, 1918
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Non-ferrous Metallurgy - Conductivity of Electrolytes Used in the Electrolytic Separation of Silver and Gold (with Discussion)By J. J. Mulligan, F. F. Colcord, E. F. Kern
The electrolytic separation of silver and gold has been practiced by the refineries in the United States for a good many years, and probably because of frequent visiting between officials of plants an
Jan 1, 1926
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Influence Of Size And The Stress System On The Flow Stress And Fracture Stress Of MetalsBy D. J. McAdam, G. W. Geil, D. H. Woodard, W. D. Jenkins
INTRODUCTION IN a series of papers, the authors and their associates have shown that the resistance of a metal to fracture is a function of all three principal stresses. 10-18,20,21,23,[1] Conseque
Jan 1, 1948
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Cleveland Paper - The First Iron Blast-Furnaces in AmericaBy W. H. Adams
Shortly after becoming one of the van-guard of mine-developers in the State of Virginia, during the year 1883, I called the attention of the Institute to certain deposits of pyrites, which have been l
Jan 1, 1892
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Offsetting Increased Labor Cost in Southern Blast-furnace OperationBy J. M. Hassler
NOWHERE can there be found a more misleading statement than the old one that "Iron can be manufactured cheaper in the South." During the past decade ironmakers and users of iron have heard varied and
Jan 1, 1937
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Technical Papers and Notes - Institute of Metals Division - Thermodynamic Study of Liquid Pb-Zn SolutionsBy F. D. Rosenthal, F. J. Dunkerley, G. J. Mills
Activities, free energies, and heats and entropies of mixing of liquid Pb-Zn alloys have been obtained by the electrode-potential method between 400° and 650°C. The large positive deviations observed
Jan 1, 1959
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Membership (2d16a6d5-c7d7-46c4-b75b-15f2f00a9f5f)NEW MEMBERS The following list comprises the names of those persons who became members during the period Oct. 10 to Nov. 10, 1915: Members BECK, WESLEY HUDSON, Civ. and Min. Engr., Ellsworth Co
Jan 12, 1915
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The Great Salt LakeIn 1776 two Franciscan friars, Dominguez and Escalante, started to find a direct route from Santa Fé to Monterey, and in their misguided wanderings northward they reached Timpanogos, now known as Utah
Jan 1, 1932
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Ingot Structure And SegregationIN THE early period of steelmaking, ingot structure and segregation presented no difficult problems. Crucible melting required very small ingots which, if properly deoxidized, gave little segregation,
Jan 1, 1944