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Refining - Developments in Refinery Engineering during 1931 - Summary
By H. W. Camp
Although the situation in the oil industry during the past year has not been conducive to large expenditures for development and research, there is little indication that such expenditures have been c
Jan 1, 1932
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Problems In Mine Taxation
By T. T. Read
In discussing the taxation of mining enterprises, it is desirable to place limits of both time and space on the field of discussion. For our present purposes it seems best to limit consideration to ta
Jan 1, 1932
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Mining Methods - Sand Filling through Pipes and Boreholes (With Discussion)
By Lucien Eaton
The use of filling in mines is less common in the United States than it is in Europe, where in some places it is required by law. In most cases the filling is placed by hand, and the material used for
Jan 1, 1932
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Types of Primary Ore Deposits (8914a484-36fc-4bac-9cb2-39856eef30af)
By C Gunther
The classification here used is one of convenience only; it is not intended to include all known types of ore deposits. The characteristic features of the several well-marked types of primary minerali
Jan 1, 1932
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Progress in the Improvement of Methods and Equipment at Open-pit Iron Mines on the Lake Superior Iron Ranges
By Max Barber
PRESENT equipment and practices in open-pit mines of the Lake Superior iron ranges have been described recently in some detail by A. H. Hubbell.1 It is anticipated that any further improvements will b
Jan 1, 1932
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The Black Hills Of South Dakota
The Black hills rise like a dark island above the far-flung prairie lands of the Dakotas; to their sombre pine-clad slopes they owe the name, Black mountains, by which they were known to the early exp
Jan 1, 1932
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Economics - Proration in Texas in 1931
By David Donoghue
Efforts made in the year 1930 and in previous years restricted production in most of the fields of Texas to a point that was satisfactory, at the beginning of 1931, to the majority of producers and bu
Jan 1, 1932
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Primary Alteration Of Wall Rocks
The term metamorphism as commonly used means any change in a rock in either form or composition, from whatever cause. By metasomatism, according to Lindgren, is meant a metamorphism that involves a ch
Jan 1, 1932
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Production Engineering - Relation between Gas Energy and Oil Production
By Byron B. Boatright
The energy which causes oil and gas to flow from a reservoir formation into a well depends upon a differential between the formation pressure and the pressure at the well face. This differential press
Jan 1, 1932
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Papers - Gravitational Methods - Interpretation of Gravitational Anomalies, I (With Discussion)
By H. Shaw
Gravitational measurements made by means of the Eotvos torsion balance over any area enable a representation to be obtained of the total gravitational effects over the surface of that area arising fro
Jan 1, 1932
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Developments in Refinery Engineering during 1931
By H. W. Camp
ALTHOUGH the situation in the oil industry during the past year has. not been conducive to large expenditures for development and research, there is little indication that such expenditures have been
Jan 1, 1932
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The Geology Of Some Kaolins Of Western Europe
By Ernest Lilley
WHILE American scientific literature contains much information upon geologic conditions controlling the production of oil in Rumania, copper in Chile, and other fuel and metallic resources in many for
Jan 1, 1932
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Using Local Experience In Wholesale Gold Mining - Effect Of Choice Of Methods In The Alaska Juneau Mill
By F. W. Bradley
This chapter on the Alaska Juneau mill is intended to make clear that "choice of methods," or the selection of proper methods, is the first essential step in launching a new enterprise; and to illustr
Jan 1, 1932
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A Quantitative Method for the Estimation of Intercrystalline Corrosion in Austenitic Stainless Steels
By J. J. B. Rutherford
IT is now well known that troublesome intercrystalline corrosion may occur in austenitic stainless steels following exposure of the metal to a temperature within the range 1000° to 1500° F. (540° to 8
Jan 1, 1932
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Critical Studies of a Modified Ledebur Method for Determination of Oxygen in Steel
By B. M. Larsen
AN increasing amount of attention is being paid to the possible influence of oxygen, in its several modes of occurrence in steel, upon some of the properties of the metal; but clearly investigations a
Jan 1, 1932
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Preface to the First Edition
By C Gunther
The purpose of this book is to present the practical side of economic geology concisely and in convenient form; established facts and the applications of accepted views are emphasized; theoretical dis
Jan 1, 1932
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Papers - Theoretical Metallurgy and X-ray Metallography - An X-ray Study of the Nature of Solid Solutions (With Discussion)
By Wheeler P. Davey, Robert T. Phelps
A study of solid solutions has long been a source of interest because of the conditions controlling their formation. X-ray investigations so far have been conducted with the idea that there were two t
Jan 1, 1932
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Economics Of Proration
By Joseph Pogue
PRORATION in the petroleum industry has come to mean a method for curtailing the production of crude petroleum by artificial effort, and it is in this sense that the term is employed throughout this p
Jan 1, 1932
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Soap Flotation of the Nonsulfides (3bc4cf2a-ec13-4550-a439-f7ced59e47c8)
By Will Coghill
FLOTATION has been so closely allied with the sulfide minerals and their early and associated oily reagents that the term "oil flotation" has erroneously been applied to the entire flotation process.
Jan 1, 1932
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Local Section Committees (5f0daf97-5b7f-49a6-aa25-e983486d7815)
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEES OF LOCAL SECTIONS Arizona E. P. MATHEWSON, Chairman W. V. DECAMP, First Vice-chairman F. W. MACLENNAN, Second Vice-chairman E. D. GARDNER, Secretary-Treasurer, U. S. Bureau O
Jan 1, 1932