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Economics - What Is A "Have Not" Nation (The 1968 Jackling Lecture)By Francis Cameron
Gloomy predictions that domestic mineral reserves are approaching exhaustion are unwarranted and may be harmful, this author contends. Specific mineral forecasting errors in the Paley Report are cited
Jan 1, 1969
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Siting For Aggregate Production In New EnglandBy William R. Barton
It is generally conceded as axiomatic that the aggregate producer and the average urban resident have mutually incompatible goals. The producer wants to be near his mass market and the average residen
Jan 1, 1975
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Production Engineering Becoming Increasingly EfficientBy A. W. WALKER
All branches of production engineering showed steady and definite progress during 1941. Most of it has been of the slower and more conservative type rather than the sensational. To a large degree the
Jan 1, 1942
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Iron and Steel - Making Rimmed Steel (with Discussion)By Carl Pierce
The writer of this article has not attempted to write a technical paper; on the contrary, he has tried to express in "steel-plant English," for steel men, a viewpoint drawn from his practice and exper
Jan 1, 1926
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United Engineering Society Building.By THEODORE DWIGHT
Members of the Institute have already received a special pamphlet descriptive of the United Engineering Society building, and wilt doubtless be interested in the progress that has been made up to date
Mar 1, 1906
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Minerals Beneficiation - Manganese Upgrading at Three Kids Mine, NevadaBy S. J. McCarroll
Fig. 1—The belt shown at right carries filter cake to mixing station over calciner. Crude ore conveyors appear in right background. THE Three Kids mine, some six miles east of Henderson, Nev., is i
Jan 1, 1955
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Papers - Some Observations and Theory on Slack-wind Blast-furnace Operation (With Discussion)By Francis M. Rice
Before the world-wide depression, the primary purpose of most blast-furnace operators was to produce a maximum tonnage of pig iron per day for each furnace in blast. Some attention was paid to the con
Jan 1, 1935
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Papers - Some Observations and Theory on Slack-wind Blast-furnace Operation (With Discussion)By Francis M. Rice
Before the world-wide depression, the primary purpose of most blast-furnace operators was to produce a maximum tonnage of pig iron per day for each furnace in blast. Some attention was paid to the con
Jan 1, 1935
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Part IV – April 1968 - Papers - The Deformation Characteristics of Textured MagnesiumBy W. F. Hosford, E. W. Kelley
By testing polycrystalline specimens from textured plates which had Previously been used to provide materials for growing single crystals, it has been possible to relate the plastic anisotropy of text
Jan 1, 1969
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Automatic Control of Open-hearth FurnacesBy W. TRINKS
RAPID progress has been made in the automatic control of open-hearth furnaces in the past few years and many firms today\supply such control apparatus. It is somewhat surprising that so little was hea
Jan 1, 1931
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New Design Of Open-Hearth Steel-Furnace Using Producer Gas.Discussion of the paper of Herbert F.. Miller, Jr., presented at the New York meeting, February, 1913, and printed in Bulletin No. 75, March, 1913, pp. 409 to 413. HENRY D. HIBBARD, Plainfield, N. J.
Jan 5, 1913
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Members, Associates and Junior Members (a1b7258b-681d-4817-9623-656d3af0062e)?Aaronson, Alfred E , Oil Producer, Pres, Tuloma Oil Co Tulsa, Okla '18 ||Abad, Leopoldo F , College of Mm , Univ of California Berkeley, Cal '23 ||Abadilla, Quirico A , Geol Dept, Cia Me
Jan 1, 1923
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Sulfur Removal at the Beaver Creek Consolidated Coal Co.'s Stinson PlantBy D. C. Sisti
A technical evaluation of actual performance of the preparation facilities at Beaver Consolidated Coal Co.'s Stinson plant is presented, with special emphasis on sulfur reduction in 1-1/2 x 3/8 i
Jan 1, 1976
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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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AviationBy W. E. D. Stokes
The faster that aircraft fly the sooner some new and stronger material must be found to take the place of the present aluminum alloy used in all-metal planes. Experts of the National Advisory Committe
Jan 1, 1942
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Mining GeophysicsBy Hans Lundberg
IN last year's report on the progress of geophysics, the airborne magnetometer was the featured new development. At that time only a relatively small number of surveys had been made. During 1947,
Jan 1, 1948
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Computer-Aided Optimization Of Grinding And Gravity Concentration At The Ardlethan Tin Concentrator, New South WalesBy K. R. Weller
The Ardlethan Tin Ltd. concentrator typically recovers 55% of the tin in a gravity concentrate at 51% grade from fresh ore assaying 0.5% Sn. Coarse gravity concentration is performed in a complex circ
Jan 1, 1984
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Institute of Metals Division - Temper Embrittlement of 5140 SteelBy C. A. Siebert, S. H. Bush
Isothermal temper-embrittlement studies were conducted on a 5140 steel at various temperatures for times as long as 3000 hr. Specimens from the embrittled steel were subjected to impact tests, metallo
Jan 1, 1955
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Bauxitic Raw MaterialsBy James W. Shaffer
Aluminum is the most abundant metallic element of the earth's crust and is a constituent of nearly every type of rock (Clark, 1924, p. 13). The sources of aluminum and aluminous material most com
Jan 1, 1975
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Increasing Assay Furnace Capacity by Larger MufflesBy Joseph T. Roy
MINING revival during the last few years has brought about a considerable increase in the number of gold and silver determinations made, noticeable in all branches of the industry but especially so in
Jan 1, 1938