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Aluminum Therapy Conquers SilicosisBy Hannon, J. W. G.
Silicosis is today's most important industrial disease and probably dates back to the Stone Age. Since the industrial revolution, increasing attention has been paid to those occupations where min
Jan 1, 1949
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Processing and CarbonizationBy A. C. Fieldner
DURING 1939, 286 by-product coke ovens were completed and put into operation. These included 140 Witputte ovens for the Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corp., at Gary, Ind.; 61 Koppers-Becker ovens for the Fo
Jan 1, 1941
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Improvements in Milling in the Southeast Missouri Lead DistrictBy THOMAS J. CLIFFORD
IN 1926, finer grinding began to be a feature of the milling practice of the Southeast Missouri lead district. Nothing since the adoption of flotation has caused greater changes and greater improvemen
Jan 1, 1934
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Aerial Photographic Contour Maps for Strip MinesBy R. H. Swallow, George Hess
Aerial photography was once a crude, uncertain tool. Today it is a precision mapping instrument which saves important time and money for strip mining and other industry. Aerial photography began in t
Jan 1, 1949
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Developing Chuquicamata's Open Pit Haulage SystemBy Robert Laurich
Chuquicamata pit was opened in 1915 with steam shovels and steam locomotives brought down from the Panama Canal excavation project. With expansions in the early years, more steam locomo¬tives were bro
Jan 11, 1959
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United Electric Coal Companies Fidelity Mine and WasheryBy AIME AIME
THE United Electric Coal Companies, operating large strip mines at various points in Illinois, pioneered in developing and perfecting the strip method of mining coal by use of large shovels and drag-l
Jan 1, 1936
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Tunneling on Top of the WorldBy T. L. Johnston
MUCH has been said and written about deep mine shafts and deep drill holes as man in his search for mineral wealth digs deeper into the earth's crust. Each year some new extra depth is heralded a
Jan 1, 1939
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Institute of Metals Division - Discussion of The Mechanism of Boundary Migration in RecrystallizationBy W. C. Leslie
W. C. Leslie (Edgar C. Bain Laboratory for Funda mental Research)—This investigation, with its com bination of high-purity metal, calorimetry, and metallography, will serve as a model for annealing st
Jan 1, 1963
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Easton Paper - A Modification of Coingt's ChargerBy Frank Firmstone
In April, 1873, No. 2 furnace at the Glendon Iron Works being out of blast, it was decided to alter it from an open to a closed top. The three side flues, through which a part of the gas was formerly
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Geology - An Extension to Moore's Method of Interpretation of Earth Resistivity MeasurementBy V. V. J. Sarma
Interpretation of earth resistivity data involves not only obtaining depth to interfaces but also determining the nature of formations from their resistivity characteristics. Moore's method of in
Jan 1, 1963
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Acid Open-Hearth ManipulationBy ANDREW McVILLIAM, WILLIAM H. HATFIELD
AT the 1902 May meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute, the, authors presented a paper on " The Elimination of Silicon in The Acid Open-Hearth," wherein they recorded a few typical examples of certai
Mar 1, 1905
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What's Right with Coal?By J. E. Tobey
THERE are a lot of good things about this great industry of ours. Let us stop commiserating and consider some of the things that are right in this business. Coal is number one in the basic material i
Jan 1, 1939
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Ilmenite and Magnetite Produced at National Lead's Macintyre DevelopmentBy I. D. Hagar
WHEN the history of American business during these momentous war years is written, an absorbing chapter will be devoted to the Maclntyre Development, in northern New York. It will tell of a timely min
Jan 1, 1942
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Unit Operation of Kettleman Hills Oil FieldBy AIME AIME
AT a joint meeting of the Tulsa Geological Society and the Mid-Continent Section of the A; I. M. E., held at Tulsa on March 21, the history of unit development in the Kettle- man Hills field was discu
Jan 1, 1932
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Papers - Mechanical Properties - Influence of Hydrogen on Mechanical Properties of Some Low-carbon Manganese-iron Alloys and on Hadfield Manganese Steel (Metals Technology, June 1944) (With discussion)By Herbert H. Uhlig
Although the mechanical properties of high-carbon manganese-iron alloys, particularly the Hadfield manganese steels, have been established, the literature discloses discrepancies in the reported prope
Jan 1, 1944
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Papers - Mechanical Properties - Influence of Hydrogen on Mechanical Properties of Some Low-carbon Manganese-iron Alloys and on Hadfield Manganese Steel (Metals Technology, June 1944) (With discussion)By Herbert H. Uhlig
Although the mechanical properties of high-carbon manganese-iron alloys, particularly the Hadfield manganese steels, have been established, the literature discloses discrepancies in the reported prope
Jan 1, 1944
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3.13 Fuels – CoalBy Ramesh Malhotra, Hubert E. (Deceased) Risser
THE WORLD Coal, as a source of energy and as a source of coke for the smelting of iron ore, has contributed significantly to the development of every major industrial nation of the world A number o
Jan 1, 1976
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Internal Friction Of Single Crystals Of Copper And ZincBy Thomas A. Read
THE internal friction of single crystals of metals is affected markedly by a variety of factors, which, according to the literature, are without influence on the internal friction of polycrystalline m
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Concentration - Experimental Flotation of Washington Magnesite Ores (Mining Technology, Jan. 1940)By H. A. Doerner, F. D. DeVaney, J.B. Clemmer
Production of magnesium metal in the United States during the past decade has increased from less than 600,000 lb. in 1928 to more than 4,800,000 lb. in 1938.1 The growing industry has stimulated inte
Jan 1, 1943
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Papers - Concentration - Experimental Flotation of Washington Magnesite Ores (Mining Technology, Jan. 1940)By J. B. Clemmer, F. D. DeVaney, H. A. Doerner
Production of magnesium metal in the United States during the past decade has increased from less than 600,000 lb. in 1928 to more than 4,800,000 lb. in 1938.1 The growing industry has stimulated inte
Jan 1, 1943