Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
-
Petroleum Production - Foreign - Persia and Iraq (With Discussion)By Sir John Cadnan
The production from the Maidan-i-Naftun area for the year ending March, 1928, was 5,340,000 tons (40,210,200 bbl.), an increase of nearly 13 per cent. over the production for the year ending in March,
Jan 1, 1929
-
Preparation Of Magnetic Fluids With Polar Solvent CarriersBy A. Kounosu, T. Fujita, J. Shimoiizaka, K. Nakatsuka
Stable aqueous dispersion of magnetite colloid of about 10 nm in diameter was obtained by allowing an anionic or nonionic surfactant to adsorb on the hydrophobic surface of magnetite particles prepare
Jan 1, 1980
-
Geophysical Exploration Moves Ahead On Two PlanetsBy Robert E. Campbell
Mining geophysics in 1969 marked a year of growth and consolidation in the application of ground and airborne geophysical methods and techniques with a 20% rise in expenditures for world-wide explorat
Jan 1, 1970
-
The Little Shift In The Big PictureBy John V. Beall
Runding the bottom corner of the West Africa11 hump, one hovers off the coast of the tiny Republic of Liberia. But not for long-as Portuguese navigators, Blackbirders, and Farrell Line captains have l
Jan 12, 1962
-
Philadelphia, Pa. Paper - American Mining Machinery in Mexico and Central AmericaBy F. H. McDowell
For more than two hundred years Mexico has been enriching the world from her inexhaustible wealth of precious metals. From this source alone, over three thousand five hundred millions of dollars have
Jan 1, 1885
-
Metal Concentrations in Some Marine Black Shales of the United StatesBy George A. Desborough, Forrest G. Poole
Marine black-shale samples of Paleozoic age in the western United States that exceed 10 wt % organic carbon contain as much as 5000 ppm vanadium, 5000 ppm molybdenum, 1300 ppm nickel, 600 pprn cobalt,
Jan 1, 1983
-
New York Paper - Interpretation of Assay Curves for Drill HolesBy Augustus Locke, Edward H. Perry
In the exploration of a copper deposit by drilling, obvious advantages are to be gained from a distinction between primary and secondary ore.' Perhaps the chief of these is the aid which such a d
Jan 1, 1916
-
Measuring The Thermomechanical And Transport Properties Of A Rockmass Using The Heated Block TestBy R. Lingle, E. Hardin, M. Board, H. Pratt, W. Ubbes, M. Voegele, N. Barton
A 2 m. cube of jointed, Pre Cambrian biotite gneiss was subjected to uniaxial and biaxial loading at ambient and elevated temperature. The effects of different boundary conditions on the following roc
Jan 1, 1982
-
Wilkes-Barre Paper - Origin of Certain Bonanza Silver-Ores of the Arid RegionBy Charles R. Keyes
In the dry regions of the globe many silver-deposits display certain remarkable features, which at the same time are so totally unlike anything met with among ore-bodies elsewhere that they hare long
Jan 1, 1912
-
Arctic Survival Study: Ice Tunneling In GreenlandBy John F. Sulzbach, Donald K. Walker, John F. Abel
With the increasing military significance of the arctic, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' ice- tunneling research program has been instituted to determine the feasibility of excavating large und
Jan 6, 1959
-
Introduction (7ee7bcdf-f19e-4455-a4ee-7607eb75b42a)By G. M. Ritcey
Purification of solutions can involve various treatment methods. In the normal sequence of metals recovery by hydrometallurgy, the ore is initially prepared for leaching by grinding to the desired opt
Jan 1, 1978
-
The 1957 Jackling Lecture - A Geologist Looks At Industrial MineralsBy Joseph L. Gillson
YOUR speaker has long sought an opportunity to review the many differences between the subject matter called economic geology and the duties of a practicing economic geologist. As the subject was taug
Jan 5, 1957
-
Interfacial Tension between Water and Oil under Reservoir ConditionsBy C. R. Hocott
THE distribution and movement of fluids in oil reservoirs are influ-enced to a great extent by capillary forces, which depend upon the size and shape of the pores in the reservoir rock, the surface ch
Jan 1, 1938
-
Principles Of Flocculation, Dispersion, And Selective FlocculationBy P. Somasundaran
Processing of fine particles in suspension is markedly affected by their state of dispersion/aggregation. In addition, tendency for a given component of the system to undergo selective aggregation or
Jan 1, 1980
-
Ottawa Paper - The Sudbury Ore-DepositsBy E. D. Peters
The Sudbury ore-deposits possess a peculiar interest for a variety of reasons. In the first place, they are deep within the borders of the Huronian rocks, and are consequently amongst the oldest depos
Jan 1, 1890
-
New York Paper - Biographical Notice of J. Peter LesleyBy Benjamin Smith Lyman
[Secretary's Note.—For lack of room this abstract, giving only an outline of Prof. Lesley's scientific work, is published here, instead of the full text of Mr. Lyman's account of his li
Jan 1, 1904
-
PART V - Communications - Crystallographic Techniques for the Interpretation of Transmission Electron Micrographs of Hexagonal MetalsBy J. Stringer, I. W. Edington, C. R. Rarey
THE geometrical interpretation of transmission electron micrographs of hcp metals is more complicated than the equivalent interpretation of cubic metal for two reasons: firstly, prominent zone axes ar
Jan 1, 1967
-
Geology and Non-Metallics - Sedimentary Metalliferous Deposits of the Red Beds (with Discussion)By John Wellington Finch
In August, 1927, the writer examined certain copper deposits in New Mexico1 which occur in beds of sandstones and shale, and in connection therewith reviewed the literature upon deposits of this type.
Jan 1, 1928
-
The Search For Australia UraniumBy H. J. Ward
RUM Jungle uranium field lies in the subtropical portion of the Northern Territory on the Finniss River, East Branch. It takes its name from a railway siding about 2 ½ miles to the southwest and 52 mi
Jan 12, 1954
-
Aluminum-copper-nickel Alloys of High Tensile Strength Subject to Heat TreatmentBy W. A. Mudge
ONE of the most prominent features of our present-day industrial development is the ever-increasing demand put upon materials of con-struction. Engineering ingenuity, within the past 25 years, has bee
Jan 1, 1935