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Geophysics - Work of the Geochemical Exploration Section of the U. S. Geological SurveyBy T. S. Lovering
GEOCHEMICAL prospecting extends the age-old method of searching out lodes with a gold pan and rationalizes the prospector's hunch that certain plants are associated with ore. It uses sensitive bu
Jan 1, 1956
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Part IX – September 1968 - Papers - A Study of the Free Energies of Formation of Uranium Monocarbide and Uranium DicarbideBy David V. Ragone, James A. Craig, Richard E. Balzhiser
The Gibbs free energies of formation of UC2 and UC were measured by equilibrating two-phase mixtures of UC2 + C and UC, + UC with liquid bismuth. The measured equilibrium concentrations of uranium i
Jan 1, 1969
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Mining-Costs At Park City, Utah.By FRED T. WILLIANS
INTRODUCTION. THE Park City mining-district is distinctively a camp of few properties, 5,000 acres, or one-third of the entire district, being under the management of but three companies. As a rule,
Jun 1, 1911
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Application Of Electron Microscope To Study Of Aluminum AlloysBy F. Keller, A. H. Geisler
Some of the important changes that take place in the structure of aluminum alloys are largely submicroscopic in character. This is especially true of the changes that accompany age-hardening and recry
Jan 1, 1944
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Crushed StoneBy Nelson Severinghaus
Crushed stone leads all industrial mineral, except cement in annual value of production in the United States. It is also interesting to note that crushed stone value is exceeded only by that of fuels,
Jan 1, 1960
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Manganese OreBy Sandford S. Cole
Manganese compounds occur in many mineral forms widely distributed throughout the crust of the earth. The most important of these commercially are the oxides which are usually found as irregular masse
Jan 1, 1960
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Loading and Hauling Equipment for use in Caving And Sublevel StopingBy James J. Wise
INTRODUCTION One basic design feature utilized in all caving and sublevel stoping techniques is the drawpoint. These draw- points may be located on sublevels when using sublevel caving methods, or
Jan 1, 1981
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Papers - Health and Safety in Mines - Industrial Dust Sampling and Analysis (Abstract)By Leonard Greenburg
The American literature in the field of dust sampling and analysis has been growing rapidly since 1915. Studies made since that time clearly indicate that there are three fundamental factors that dete
Jan 1, 1934
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Aggregates-Crushed StoneBy Thomas F. Torries, George H. K. Schenck
Crushed and broken stone is used directly in construction as an aggregate and accounts for about half the value and two-fifths of the quantity of natural aggregates consumed in the United States. Sand
Jan 1, 1975
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Minerals Beneficiation - Hydrodynamics of Flotation CellsBy R. F. Yap, N. Arbiter, C. C. Harris
A fully-instrumented driving mechanism has been constructed to study the power, aerating and solid suspension characteristics of several laboratory flotation machines. Machines operating over norma
Jan 1, 1970
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Minerals Beneficiation - A Chemical Interpretation of Surface Phenomena in Silicate MineralsBy R. A. Deju, R. B. Bhappu
Further information on the surface characteristics of the silicate minerals was obtained by experimentally correlating the oxygen-silicon ratio of the silicates with their electrokinetic properties. S
Jan 1, 1967
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Part IX - The Copper-Tin-Arsenic Constitution Diagram-Part II Reactions in the Solid StateBy Robert Maes, Robert de Strycker
The Cu-Sn-As systeM was studied in the region near the Cu-42 and (214-As binary diagrams, where reactions in the solid state appear, resulting from the decomposition of the y(Cu-Sn) phase and from the
Jan 1, 1967
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Ymir Yankee Girl Gold Mines Ltd.By Lawrence Wright
ON the steep slopes of the Kootenays, 15 to 20 miles south of Nelson, B. C., are a number of ore occurrences (Fig. 1). One that has many features of mining and geological interest is the Ymir Yankee G
Jan 1, 1938
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Institute of Metals Division - Study of the Fe-Si Order-Disorder TransformationBy W. Ivanick, Frank W. Glaser
ORDERING reactions of Fe-Si compositions in the a region have been mentioned in a number of review articles.7-8 However, little is known in regard to the critical temperature, T at which this transfor
Jan 1, 1957
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Some Outstanding Mine-hoisting EquipmentBy Bruno Nordberg
HOISTING is one of the earliest endeavors of man with machinery, for hoisting was probably used by the early Egyptians. Treadmills were used for general hoisting until early in the nineteenth century
Jan 1, 1940
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Buffalo Paper - The Alluvial Deposits of Western AustraliaBy T. A. Rickard
The interior of West Australia is an arid table-land, elevated 1400 feet above the sea. This plateau is flanked to the south by the Tertiary limestones which fringe the Great Australian Bight. It is b
Jan 1, 1899
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Technical Notes Iron and Steel Division - Continuous Casting Of Three Types of Low Carbon SteelBy F. G. Jaicks
RECOGNITION of the benefits to be gained from the continuous casting of molten steel into finished or semifinished products has been given by scientific minds since the very beginnings of steel plant
Jan 1, 1958
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Effect of Particle Size on Flotation of SphaleriteBy W. A. Wall, R. L. Kidd
IN present-day flotation practice, grinding of the flotation feed is carried to extremely fine sizes, 70 to 80 per cent minus 200 mesh being customary. The greatest flotation losses occur in the coars
Jan 1, 1933
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Structure and Properties of Iron-Rich Alloys - Ar" in Chromium Steels (Metals Technology, February 1945) (With discussion)By Alexander R. Troiano, Eugene P. Klier
Since the very early work on quenched structures, where the products of the martensite transformation had been recognizedl this transformation has provoked much interest and study. Theoretically it wa
Jan 1, 1945
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Papers - Ventilation and Air Conditioning of the Magma Mine (T.P. 979)By C. B. Foraker
THE Magma mine, of the Magma Copper Co., at Superior, Pinal County, Arizona, is 68 miles east of Phoenix and 21 miles west of Miami, Arizona, on highway U. S. 180. Temperatures and Underground Wate
Jan 1, 1940