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Chicago Paper - Chrome-ore Deposits in Cuba (with Discussion)By Ernest F. Burchard
A reconnaissance of the chrome and manganesel ore deposits of Cuba was made in the spring of 1918 by Albert Burch, representative of the U. S. Bureau of Mines, and the writer, representing the U. S. G
Jan 1, 1920
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Heat Utilization - The Recirculating Furance (with Discussion)By L. A. Mekler
The recirculating furnace is primarily a heating apparatus of the convection type in which the heat-absorbing surfaces are heated by a mixture of fresh products of combustion and a portion of the comb
Jan 1, 1928
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Furnace Efficiency And Available Heat From Fuel (780a632f-e0a9-46cb-8c21-234e12895e43)THIS chapter and Chapter 19 deal with the heat quantities involved in open-hearth steelmaking, including the thermal efficiency of the furnace as a generator of high-temperature heat, the heat storage
Jan 1, 1964
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Examples of Bauxite Deposits Illustrating Variations in OriginBy E. C. Harder
CERTAIN typical characteristics of bauxites, ores of aluminum permit their classification into a number of categories, each of which has special features that enable grouping within it deposits from w
Jan 1, 1952
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New York Paper February, 1918 - Methods of Valuing Oil Lands (with Discussion)By M. L. Requa
This paper is abstracted from the report of the Appraisement Committee of the Independent Oil Producers' Agency, of which the writer was Chairman. The other members of the committee were M. V. Mc
Jan 1, 1918
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New York Paper - Electric Haulage Systems in Butte Mines (with Discussion)By C. D. Woodward
PrioR to 1902, the tramming of ore from the stopes to the shafts, in the Butte mines, was done by man or animal power, but the demand for greater tonnage and the need for more improved methods of tram
Jan 1, 1923
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Valuation Of Mineral Property (747034f8-6b6e-4c27-b435-1b1ef9c1c13d)By L. C. Raymond
Valuations in the mineral industry differ from those of other enterprises because mines and oil wells have a definite life so cannot be considered a perpetuity. This requires that in any mineral-prope
Jan 1, 1964
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San Francisco Paper - Some Problems in Copper Leaching (with Discussion)By L. D. Ricketts
' In recent years the metallurgical field of the copper industry has expanded greatly, the copper ores have become lean add diverse in charactcr, and we are obliged to treat such ores on a very l
Jan 1, 1916
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Bethlehem Paper - American Mining Schools (See also Supplement, p. 309)-A Presidential AddressBy Roberts H. Richards
It is nearly twenty years since Dr. Raymond, then U. S. Commissioner of Mining Statistics, wrote the first paper (so far as I have been informed) upon the education of tile mining engineer, as a disti
Jan 1, 1887
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Iron and Steel - Reserves of Lake Superior hlanganiferous Iron Ores (with Discussion)By Carl Zapffe
The manganese ore reserves of Lake Superior, because of their location and nature, have recently achieved a rnarked degree of importance as compared with the world's manganese reserves. To apprec
Jan 1, 1927
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Tripoli (147e4655-bcde-49d2-9b83-44a28403e8f3)By Robert W. Metcalf
THE name "tripoli" is used to designate a number of more or less similar types of silica of sedimentary origin. Usually they are spoken of as "soft" silicas, and are light, very fine grained, porous,
Jan 1, 1949
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Reservoir Rock Characteristics - Detection and Estimation of Dead-End Pore Volume in Reservoir Rock by Conventional Laboratory TestsBy R. N. Upadhyay, M. Maleki, I. Fatt
Conventional laboratory core analysis tests on samples of two limestone reservoir rocks indicate that about 20 per cent of PV is in dead-end pores. These tests (electric logging formation factor, merc
Jan 1, 1967
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Underground Mining - Some Basic Concepts in Uranium Mine VentilationBy Robley D. Evans, Gerald L. Schroeder
Advanced techniques for control of radon (Rn) daughter product concenrrations (working levels, WL) in the uranium mines are discussed. Understanding the physical laws which govern the flux of radon in
Jan 1, 1970
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Reservoir Engineering - General - A Method for Calculating Multi-Dimensional Immiscible Displacem...By B. Zondek, W. T. Cardwell, J. W. Sheldon
The fundamental equations that are used to describe two-phase fluid flow in porous media are Darcy's law for each phase and an equation of continuity for each component. The special case of one-d
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Technical Papers and Notes - Institute of Metals Division - Gas Desorption of Copper PowdersBy M. J. Sinnott, J. C. Tobin
A technique for collecting and analyzing the small quantities of gases desorbed on heating metal powders has been developed. The gases collected from copper powders of various types of manufacture hav
Jan 1, 1959
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Studies in Metal Crystal Orientation.- I. Determination of Orientation of Metallic Single-crystal Specimens by High-voltage X-raysBy Thomas Wilson
IN a single-crystal cube of iron the arrangement of the atoms is that characteristic of iron at room temperature: the body-centered cubic lattice. X-ray investigation has shown this structure to be ch
Jan 1, 1929
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Metal Mining - Liquid-oxygen Blasting at Chuqicamata, Chile (with Discussion)By H. C. Schultz, F. K. Middleton Hunter
Certain local conditions were known to govern in large measure the successful adaptation of liquid-oxygen explosives to the large-scale blasting at Chuquicamata. The wide variation in hardness of the
Jan 1, 1928
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Discussion Of The Papers Presented At The Iron And Steel Open-Hearth Session At The New York Meeting, February, 1926CONTENTS PAGE PEIRCE, CARL-Making Rimmed Steel. Discussed by L. F. Reinartz. H. D. Hibbard, C. L. Kinney, Jr., A. H. Woodward, V. B. Buck, A. L. Feild, J. V. W. Reynders 1 SCHROEDER, F. W., and L
Jan 4, 1926
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New York Paper - Secondary Intrusive Origin of Gulf Coastal Plain Salt Domes (with Discussion)By W. G. Matteson
The origin of the salt domes of the Gulf coastal plain has been investigated by many of the most able geologists, but the problem cannot be said to have been satisfactorily solved. Since 1860, numerou
Jan 1, 1921
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Modern Mining Methods-SurfaceBy Edwin R. Phelps
In the year 1900 about 212 million tons of bituminous coal were produced in the United States. Almost none of this was produced by surface mines (Fig. 1), because there was no large equipment suitable
Jan 1, 1973