Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
The Zinc Ores Of The Joplin District. Their Composition, Character And VariationBy W. Geo. Waring
Introduction THE winning of zinc and lead ores from the comparatively shallow deposits of the Joplin district, presents, few such problems for the mining engineer as are encountered in deep ore minin
Jan 9, 1917
-
Diamond Drilling with Surfactants in Upper Michigan Amygdaloidal Basalts Using Surface-Set BitsBy Harold F. Unger, Byron S. Snowden, William H. Engelmann
The effects of using surfactant solutions while diamond drilling in amygdaloidal basalt of the Upper Michigan copper mining district were investigated. Nonionic, anionic, and cationic surfactant solut
Jan 1, 1976
-
Metal Mining - Use of Concrete UndergroundBy Joseph Bernhardt
THE Cornwall Ore Mines, Division of the Bethlehem Steel Co., at Cornwall, Lebanon County, consists of two separate magnetite ore bodies, approximately one mile apart. The one ore body was an outcrop
Jan 1, 1951
-
St. Louis Paper - The Zinc Ores of the Joplin District (with Discussion)By W. Geo. Waring
The winning of zinc and lead ores from the comparatively shallow deposits of the Joplin district presents few such problems for the mining engineer as are encountered in deep ore mining and in the han
Jan 1, 1918
-
Metal Mining - Use of Concrete UndergroundBy Joseph Bernhardt
THE Cornwall Ore Mines, Division of the Bethlehem Steel Co., at Cornwall, Lebanon County, consists of two separate magnetite ore bodies, approximately one mile apart. The one ore body was an outcrop
Jan 1, 1951
-
Alaska Juneau Deep Level MiningBy P. R. Bradley
NO thought had been given to deep level mining at the Alaska Juneau mine prior to 1930, but in that year a prospect winze was started and continued for 1000 ft. vertically below the main haulage or ad
Jan 1, 1936
-
Mineral Beneficiation: A PerspectiveBy Nathaniel Arbiter
There is a history in all men's lives, Figuring the nature of the times deceas'd, The which observ'd, a man may prophesy, With a near aim, of the main chance of things. W. Shake
Jan 1, 1971
-
New York Paper - Grain Growth in Silicon Steel (with Discussion)By W. E. Ruder
It has been pointed out by Stead1 that grains of considerable coarseness may be developed in steels containing from 3 to 5 per cent. of silicon, and in a previous paper2 the present author has shown t
Jan 1, 1914
-
NEW Haven Paper - The Coal Production of the United States in 1874By Richard P. Rothwell
In January last I published in the Engineering and Mining Journal a table giving, with a considerable degree of accuracy, the production of anthracite coal for the year 1874. At that time it mas impos
-
Romantic AndacolloBy F. R. Koeberlin
ABOUT thirty miles south of the port of Coquimbo, Chile, nestling in one of the western outliers of the main Andes range, lies the little mining town of Andacollo, a place whose history and traditions
Jan 1, 1938
-
New York Paper - Gold-Milling in the Black HillsBy H. O. Hofman
With the exception of the exhaustive paper on the Father de Smet mill, by its designer, Mr. A. J. Bowie, Jr. (Bans., x. 87), nothing, so far as the writer is aware, has as yet appeared on the stamp-mi
Jan 1, 1889
-
Tintic Mining District (61a046e6-ba1f-476a-9d29-d784b65b268a)"With a total value to date of well over $200,000,000.00 for its ore production, the Tintic mining district, which is about 100 miles southwest of Salt Lake City, ranks as one of the three main ore pr
Jan 1, 1925
-
Latest Practice In Burning Cement And Lime In EuropeBy O. G. Lellep
IN every country economic circumstances prescribe the method used to produce a commodity at lowest cost. In Pennsylvania a man's wages for working 4 hr buys a ton of coal wholesale; in Germany a
Jan 7, 1954
-
A New MicromagnetometerBy Frank Rieber
THE discovery that strongly magnetic bodies localized near the surface of the earth could be detected by the distortion which they produced in the resultant magnetic field marked the beginning of magn
Jan 1, 1928
-
New York Paper - Potash as Byproduct from the Blast Furnace (with Discussion)By R. J. Wysor
Since the outbreak of the European war, few problems of raw-material supply have commanded more nation-wide attention than potash. It is well known that before the war the domestic production of potas
Jan 1, 1917
-
Photoelasticity and Its Application to Mine-pillar and Tunnel ProblemsBy David Sinclair
THE dimensions and shapes of mine structures may at present be determined by (1) field experience, (2) structural calculations, and (3) barodynamic tests.§ None of these, however, provide information
Jan 1, 1940
-
Kennecott Copper Corporation - Ray Mines Division - Ray, ArizonaProspectors were digging silver in the Ray mine area in 1873, and by 1880 high-grade copper ore was feeding a 30-ton copper furnace. In 1910, D. C. Jackling and his associates organized the Ray Consol
Jan 1, 1978
-
-
Some Principles Controlling The Deposition Of OresBy C. R. Van Hise
PART I.-GENERAL PRINCIPLES. [ ]
Jan 1, 1902
-
Philadelphia, Pa. Paper - The Siemens Patents for Improvements in Glass-Furnaces, with Suggestions for their Use with Natural GasBy B. Silliman
THE remarkable outflow of natural gas recently developed in Western Pennsylvania, and along the valley of the Ohio and its tributaries, has called attention to an important series of patents for impro
Jan 1, 1885