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Labor-Management Relations In The Mineral Industries Of North AmericaBy W. J. Uren, Charles R. Kuzell
The industries engaged in winning minerals from the earth, because of their widespread dissemination, are faced with perhaps as wide a variety of labor-management problems as may be found in any other
Jan 1, 1959
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Asbestos Deposits of GeorgiaBy O. B. Hopkins
As prefatory to the body of this paper, a few general statements will be made (1) in regard to the history and importance of the asbestos, (2) as to the principal sources of the raw material, and (3)
Jan 1, 1915
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Paper - Magnetic Methods - Magnetometric Investigation of Gold Placer Deposits near Golden, ColoradoBy C. A. Heiland, W. H. Courtier
The investigations described were made on a portion of Clear Creek basin near Golden, Colo. (-4 portion of the area under survey is shown in Fig. 1. The photograph was taken in the vicinity of station
Jan 1, 1929
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Ocean Mineral Terminals: 4 Case Studies OnBy John Sasadi, Karl Heinz Zepter, Leonard Sugin, Roger L. Hulette
Mt. Newman Mining Co. is now completing an expansion program, begun even before initial construction was complete, which will result in the ability to ship up to 35 million tpy of iron ore by early 19
Jan 6, 1972
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Minerals And The Developing EconomiesBy W. G. Jeffery, James F. McDivitt
THE FRAMEWORK Consider where you, the reader, would place the emphasis m your answer to the following questions on mineral supply. Do you think of the mineral resources of developing countries in
Jan 1, 1976
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St. Louis Paper - The Geological Distribution of Natural Gas in the United StatesBy Charles A. Ashburner
' I. Natural-Gas Explorations. The rapid development of the natural-gas* industry in Western Pennsylvania, and the great economy which results from its use, both for manufacturing and domestic
Jan 1, 1887
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New York Paper - Progressive Regional Carbonization of Coals (with Discussion)By David White
Attention has been given to the sources and supply of the raw vegetal matter and the conditions of its submission to the process of sedimentation. An original and most valuable review has been made of
Jan 1, 1925
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Rates Of Open-Hearth ReactionsTHE problem of reaction rates in the open-hearth process is essentially that of trying to form a fairly clear picture of the "chemical mechanisms" in the bath. Quantitative data on reaction rates woul
Jan 1, 1951
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The Evolution Of The Round Table For The Treatment Of Metalliferous Slimes.By Theodore Simons
(Butte Meeting, August, 1913.) DURING the last half century a great amount of ingenuity and energy has been devoted to the invention of appliances for the recovery of valuable minerals from very fine
Jan 7, 1913
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Institute of Metals Division - Phase Relations in the Titanium-Aluminum SystemBy Elmars Ence, Harold Margolin
The titanium-aluminum system has been investigated in the composition region 0 to 34 pct Al in the temperature range 800" to 1450°C. The phases encountered in this region were: a,ß, TiAl3, The reactio
Jan 1, 1962
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Papers - Electrical Methods - Electrical Coring; a Method of Determining Bottom-hole Data by ElectricalBy E. G. Leonardon, C. Schlumberger, M. Schlumberger
Since the beginning of the year 1928 the senior authors and their associates have applied a series of procedures which makes possible the detailed study in situ of the formations traversed by a drill
Jan 1, 1934
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Papers - - Production Engineering - Advantages of Brines in Secondary Recovery of Petroleum by Water-flooding (TP 2127, Petr. Tech., March 1947, with discussion)By Richard V. Hughes, Rudolf J. Pfister
The necessity for getting more water into sands of low permeability in any secondary-recovery water-flood operation in order to recover all the available oil always has been a major problem. In the ea
Jan 1, 1947
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Papers - - Production Engineering - Advantages of Brines in Secondary Recovery of Petroleum by Water-flooding (TP 2127, Petr. Tech., March 1947, with discussion)By Richard V. Hughes, Rudolf J. Pfister
The necessity for getting more water into sands of low permeability in any secondary-recovery water-flood operation in order to recover all the available oil always has been a major problem. In the ea
Jan 1, 1947
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Papers - Zinc - The Waelz ProcessBy William E. Harris
Time and experience have demonstrated that by means of the Waelz process zinc, lead, cadmium, arsenic, antimony, bismuth and tin can be volatilized satisfactorily. In this way difficult gold ores are
Jan 1, 1937
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Effect of Particle Size on Flotation of SphaleriteBy W. A. Wall, R. L. Kidd
IN present-day flotation practice, grinding of the flotation feed is carried to extremely fine sizes, 70 to 80 per cent minus 200 mesh being customary. The greatest flotation losses occur in the coars
Jan 1, 1933
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Institute of Metals Division - High Temperature 0xidation of Some Iron-Chromium AlloysBy M. Cohen, D. Caplan
The scaling characteristics of three Fe-Cr alloys have been investigated by determining their weight gain vs. time curves at 1600° to 2000° F. The scales formed thereby have been examined using the te
Jan 1, 1953
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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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Institute of Metals Division - Particle Coarsening in a Copper-Silica AlloyBy Nicholas J. Grant, Noboru Komatsu
Electron-micrographic studies and hardness tests were made of an internally oxidized dispersion-strengthened Cu-12 vol pct SiO2 alloy follozuing longtime annealing at elevated temperatures. The rate o
Jan 1, 1964
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Columbus Paper - Colloidal State in Metals and Alloys (with Discussion)By Jerome Alexander
The object of this paper is to show that many of the important phenomena of metals and alloys are due to the facts that, at some stage, metals and alloys, or some of their constituents, are in a collo
Jan 1, 1921
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Frontiers of Uranium ExplorationBy John W. Gabelman
Uranium exploration technology historically has followed the economic cycle of demand, exploration spurt, and trailing supply; but with a greater lag. Greatest progress was made during the wane of dem
Jan 1, 1976