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Institute Reports For the Year 1930 (c73b659d-b14f-4cd3-ad4c-44d13b7a7429)GENTLEMEN Herewith are transmitted reports from the Treasurer and of the principal standing committees of the Institute. To these special reports members are referred for details as to the year'
Jan 1, 1923
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Intermittent Mine VentilationBy Oscar A. Glaeser
MINE VENTILATION is an important factor in mine maintenance as well as having direct bearing on labor efficiency. Effective ventilation systems are costly, especially those for the deeper mines, but w
Jan 1, 1932
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Illness in Industry-Its Cost and PreventionBy Thomas Darlington
THE obligation of an employer to the State requires certain things of him as matters of good citizenship: for instance, that his workmen shall have a living wage, that child labor shall not be employe
Jan 2, 1918
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Social and Religious Organizations as Factors in the Labor Problem ? DiscussionSIDNEY ROLLE, Chrome, N. J.-I should like to ask if Mr. Bach does not think it rather harmful to let the amen depend entirely on the company, whether it would not be a good plan to let the men aid a l
Jan 4, 1918
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Russian Oilfield DevelopmentsBy Beeby Thompson
ALTHOUGH the exclusion of foreigners and private owners from participation in the development of the. Russian oil fields prevents first-hand information being obtained, both official and private news
Jan 3, 1925
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Factors In The Ignition Of Methane And Coal Dust By ExplosivesBy G. St. J. Perrott
ONE of the important hazards in coal mining is the danger of ignition of explosive mixtures of methane and air or coal dust and air, or both, by the explosives used in blasting the coal. It has long b
Jan 10, 1926
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United Engineering Societies Library (2c2d235d-2ce5-4cf6-9021-766bd4d272c2)Book Review MEXICO UNDER CARRANZA. By Thomas E. Gibbon, Los Angeles, California. Doubleday Page and Co., New York, 1919, 270 pp., 711/2 X 5 in. $1.50. A vivid, accurate, convincing summing up of th
Jan 8, 1919
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Colorado Paper - AvalanchesBy B. E. Fernow
MINING interests in the Western mountains are very seriously affected by the danger to property and life from destructive snowslides and avalanches. This is a danger which the miner has largely brough
Jan 1, 1890
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Effect of Arsenic and Tellurium on the Surface Tension of LeadBy Douglas J. Harvey
The surface tension of lead-tellurium alloys (in the range 0 to 6.70 at. pct Te) ad lead-arsenic alloys (in the range 0 to 10.53 at. pct As) has been examined by the maximum bubble pressure method. T
Jan 1, 1962
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Metallurgical Research in ChicagoBy AIME AIME
A METALLURGICAL research building is to be erected for the Armour Research Foundation at the Illinois Institute of Technology. It will be located at the corner of Federal and 34th Sts., Chicago, and f
Jan 1, 1942
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Macintyre Development of National Lead Co.By AIME AIME
ON the headwaters of the Hudson Riser, in a sparsely populated area of the north woods at Tahawus, N. Y., thirty miles from the nearest railroad, is the Maclntyre property of National Lead Co. Operati
Jan 1, 1943
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Oil Resources Of EcuadorBy V. F. Marsters
SEEPAGES Of oil in Ecuador have been known for many years. The locality first to receive attention, and still worked in a modest way, lies on the north shore of the Santa Elena peninsula, between La P
Jan 7, 1922
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Oil and Gas Developments In Ohio in 1945By KENNETH CITTISGHAM
During the year 1945, the total number of wells drilled in Ohio, including the. non¬productive wells, was 1034. For the 10-year period ending with 1945, the average completions per year were 1125, the
Jan 1, 1946
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New York Paper February, 1918 - Illness in Industry – Its Cost and Prevention (with Discussion)By Thomas Darlington
The obligation of an employer to the State requires certain things of him as matters of good citizenship: for instance, that his workmen shall have a living wage, that child labor shall not be employe
Jan 1, 1918
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Colorado Paper - Influence of Silicon on the Determination of Phosphors in Iron.By Thomas M. Drown
The process for determining phosphorus in iron now in most general use in the laboratories of iron and steel works, is, I think, the one proposed bv Mr. Emmerton." In this process the solution of the
Jan 1, 1890
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Aerial Photographic MapsBy Gerard Matthes
WITHIN the last three years, aerial mapping has made wonderful progress. Its three sources of development in North America may be enumerated as follows: (1) The work of the U. S. Army Air. Service and
Jan 3, 1925
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Foreign Minerals And American CapitalBy H. DeWitt Smith
THE disastrous effect of two major wars on foreign economic health is giving American capital opportunities which might have not otherwise developed. At a time when discovery of major orebodies in the
Jan 1, 1952
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The Thunder Mountain Mining District Valley County, IdahoBy Clyde Ross
The Thunder Mountain mining district is in eastern Valley County, Idaho. It is of undefined extent but nearly all of the development is confined to the ridge between Monumental and Marble creeks in un
Jan 1, 1933
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Bethlehem Paper - Notes on the New Chemical Laboratory of the Missouri School of MinesBy Charles E. Wait
The old laboratory at the School of Mines was among the notoriously bad ones, being situated in apartments of the main collegebuildings not originally intended, and conspicuously unfit, for the use to
Jan 1, 1887
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Lake Champlain (Plattsburgh) Paper - Fault-RulesBy Francis Freeland
An examination of accessible English literature shows that but small space has been allotted to the determination of faults ; most suggestions being confined to Schmidt's rule of the downthrow on
Jan 1, 1893