Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Papers - Trend of the Southern Pig-iron Business (T. P. 851)
By W. E. Curran
For years the geographical isolation of the Southern iron-ore district from the great producing centers in the North and East enabled it to meet its conditions and solve its own problems without regar
Jan 1, 1938
-
Coal - The Response of Varying Hydrocyclone Cone Angles in Fine Coal Cleaning
By R. A. Falconer, H. L. Lovell
With increasing requirements for fine coal cleaning and the many advantages of the cyclone operating on a coal-water slurry, a series of studies designed to achieve an enhanced understanding of the cy
Jan 1, 1968
-
Papers - Lead - Lead Blast-furnace Practice at Trail, B. C.
By G. E. Murray
Lead blast-furnace work at Trail is unique in that this is the only plant in the world where blast-furnace smelting on a large scale for both lead and zinc recovery is carried on under one management.
Jan 1, 1937
-
Discussions - Institute of Metals Division (page 1560)
J. D. Fast and J. L. Meijering (Philips Research Laboratories, N. V. Philips' Gloeilampenfabrieken, Eindhoven, Netherlands)— After the departure of our friend Dijkstra to the United States, inves
Jan 1, 1954
-
Gasification By The Moving-Burden Technique
By J. W. R. Rayner
THE conventional method of making water gas involves individual plants for the separate carbonization of coal to coke and the subsequent gasification of coke with steam. The process demands lump cok
Jan 1, 1953
-
Redesign And Construction Of A Tailings Dam To Resist Earthquakes
By C. O. Brawner
INTRODUCTION Tailings dams up to about 200 ft. high are proposed to store tailings for a major mining operation on Marinduque Island in the Philippines. The original design of the dam utilized a c
Jan 1, 1972
-
Geophysical Education and Exploratory Geophysics as a Career
By Donald Barton
Geophysical methods of prospecting taken as a whole do not seem to offer much promise to a young man planning to enter them in the future. They have come to stay, to be sure, and they will continue in
Jan 1, 1938
-
Papers - General - Choice of Geophysical Methods in Prospecting for Oil Deposits (With Discussion)
By E. DeGolyer
The only known direct method of discovering oil deposits is by the drilling of test wells. Such exploration is always hazardous and generally very costly. The problem of the prospector, therefore, is
Jan 1, 1932
-
Papers - Geophysics Education - Geophysics Education and Exploratory Geophysics as a Career (T. P. 950)
By Donald C. Barton
Geophysical methods of prospecting taken as a whole do not seem to offer much promise to a young man planning to enter them in the future. They have come to stay, to be sure, and they will continue in
Jan 1, 1940
-
The Water Supply at the Bessemer Steel Works of the Edgar Thomson Steel Company, Limited, Pittsburgh, Penna.
By P. Barnes
(Resident Engineer, 1873-75.) SEVERAL statements have been made to the Institute, somewhat detached from each other, as to the cost of some parts of these works, but they have not included any extend
Jan 1, 1879
-
Halifax Paper - The Improved Brückner Cylinders
By R. W. Raymond
THE Brüclrner roasting-cylinder is well known as an apparatus which has done good work in the desulphnrization, particularly of refractory silver ores, in the western districts of this country. A pape
Jan 1, 1886
-
Geophysics - Geophysics on the Pennsylvania Turnpike
By H. LeRoy Scharon, A. B. Cleaves
THE application of geophysical techniques in the A engineering surveys of the Philadelphia and Western Extensions of the Pennsylvania Turnpike System is unique inasmuch as this is the first time, (to
Jan 1, 1952
-
Lake George and Lake Champlain Paper - The Water Supply at the Bessemer Steel Works of the Edgar Thomson Steel Company, Limited, Pittsburgh, Pa.
By P. Barnes
Several statements have been made to the Institute, somewhat detached from each other, as to the cost of some parts of these works, but they have not included any extended description of the buildings
Jan 1, 1879
-
Extractive Metallurgy Division - El Paso Slag Treatment Plant
By T. J. Woodside
Prior to 1927 the lead blast furnace charge at El Paso consisted principally of direct-smelting carbonate ores, very low in zinc, and the resulting slag seldom carried more than 4.0 pct. With the exha
Jan 1, 1950
-
Antoine M. Gaudin - His Life And His Influence On People
By H. Rush Spedden
Antoine M. Gaudin was a vigorously creative man and throughout his career an internationally respected leader of his chosen profession of mineral engineering. To his professional colleagues and client
Jan 1, 1976
-
Pinson Mining Co. – Winnemucca, Nevada
The Pinson Mining Co., which will start production in very early 1981, is the fourth Carbon-In-Pulp plant to be put into operation in the United States. The property is located in Humbolt County, Nev
Jan 1, 1981
-
Geophysics - Meteorological Influence on Radon Concentration in Drillholes
By A. B. Tanner
The effects of radon in drillholes on gamma-ray logs have been described by L. S. Hilpert and C. M. Bunker1 Since these effects may cause drastic error in the evaluation of uranium deposits, it is use
Jan 1, 1960
-
Institute of Metals Division - Some Effects of Phosphorus and Nitrogen on the Properties of Low Carbon Steel - Discussion
By G. H. Enzian
W. C. Ellis—The intergranular fracture observed by these authors in brass seems to be characteristic of metals when tested under similar conditions. It has been observed by us in room temperature test
Jan 1, 1951
-
History Of Chuquicamata Copper
By D. M. Dunbar
LONG before Columbus discovered America the original inhabitants toiled in the copper workings of the Andean Cordillera. Their best diggings appear to have been at Chuquicamata, site of the huge prese
Jan 1, 1952
-
Institute of Metals Division - Ionic Disorder in Manganous Oxide (TN)
By C. E. Birchenall
DaVIES and Richardson1 have measured composition changes for Mn1-Owith variation in the equilibrium partial pressure of oxygen at 1500°, 1575°, and 1650°C, where 6 is the deviation from the simple sto
Jan 1, 1961