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Geology And Utilization Of Tennessee Phosphate Rock
By Richard Smith
After a brief history of the phosphate industry of Tennessee, the distribution and origin of the phosphate rocks are described. Then the mining and treatment, together with costs of production, and th
Jan 9, 1924
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Byproduct Coking In Alabama
By F. W. Miller
A brief history of byproduct coking in Alabama with short general descriptions of plants and the state's production of beehive and byproduct coke. PRIOR to the Civil War, there were several smal
Jan 9, 1924
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Effect Of Sulfur On Blast-Furnace Process
By T. L. Joseph
Sulfur balances calculated from operating data covering thirty-five blast furnaces indicate that approximately 92 per cent. of the total sulfur charged enters with the coke, 7 per cent. with the ore,
Jan 9, 1924
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Milling Practice Of American Zinc Co. Of Tennessee At Mascot
By Robert Ammon
THE milling practice at Mascot, at present, consists of dry crushing to 5/8 in., jigging, fine grinding, and flotation. The ore arrives at the mill from two mines, No. 1 mine shaft being located in th
Jan 9, 1924
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Mining Methods At Mascot Mines, Tennessee
By H. A. Coy
THE Mascot mines of the American Zinc. Co. of Tennessee are situated at Mascot, Tenn., 14 miles northeast of Knoxville, on the Southern Railway. The district is centrally located in the Great Valley,
Jan 9, 1924
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Coal Washing Practice in Alabama
By H. S. Greismer
Alabama washes a larger percentage of its total coal output than any state in the Union. For producing coking coal, three-compartment jigs are favored; mines providing, steam and commercial coal use s
Jan 9, 1924
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Oil And Gas Leases
By Rush Greenslade
THE oil and gas lease is the basic contract of the oil and gas industry; it is the foundation stone upon which the producing industry, particularly, is based. As the industry is precarious and highly
Jan 8, 1924
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Factors Affecting Bank Slopes In Steam-Shovel Operations
By Louis Cates
AT THE annual meeting of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers in February, 1923, the Chairman of the Committee on Ground Movement and Subsidence appointed a subcommittee to wor
Jan 8, 1924
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Determination of Dissolved Oxygen in Cyanide Solutions
By A. J. Weinig
The method described is a modification of Schutzenberger's whereby the solution in titrations and the standards are protected from the atmosphere by a layer of kerosene. Indigo-disulfonate is th
Jan 8, 1924
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Redistillation Of Zinc
By Kurt Stock
The war caused a demand for enormous quantities of high-grade zinc, which were not available and could not be produced from pure ores in sufficient amounts and in the time required. Redistillation of
Jan 7, 1924
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Experiments On The Heat Treatment Of Alpha-Beta Brass
By O. W. Ellis
CERTAIN alloys1 that, as a result of quenching, are retained in the form of homogeneous solid solution are known to increase in hardness and strength on standing at room temperature or on heating at s
Jan 7, 1924
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Evaporation Loss Of Petroleum Theories And Their Application
By J. H. Wiggins
This paper first pictures the economic phase of evaporation losses and the actual evaporative conditions in handling and storing crude and gasoline in the United States; then follows a discussion of s
Jan 7, 1924
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Coatings Formed On Corroded Metals And Alloys
By George Enos
As the coating formed affects the corrosion rate, duplicate samples of eight non-ferrous alloys were placed in flowing mine water. The alloys tested were as-cast or as-rolled and machined or polished.
Jan 7, 1924
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Application of Gaussian Curve to Mining Industry
By Hugh Archbald
IT is possible to construct a simple diagram of the earnings, or the production, of the men employed at a coal mine that will show not only if the conditions tend toward contentment among the men, but
Jan 7, 1924
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Casting And Heat Treatment Of Some Aluminum-Copper-Magnesium Alloys
By Samuel Daniels
Aluminum-base alloys containing small amounts of copper and magnesium possess but ordinary physical properties as sand cast, but may be treated to give a remarkable range of tensile values and of Brin
Jan 7, 1924
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Chemical Equilibria During Solidification And Cooling Of White Cast Iron
By H. A. Schwartz
By analyzing cementite separated electrolytically from white cast iron of known composition and history, the distribution of silicon between austenite and cementite during and after freezing has been
Jan 7, 1924
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Notes On The Hardness Of Heat-Treated Aluminum Bronze
By George Comstock
Results are given of scleroscope and Brinell tests on specimens of cast 10-per cent. aluminum bronze, quenched and reheated at various low temperatures. The scleroscope was not found as reliable as th
Jan 7, 1924
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The Electrical Dehydration Of Cut Oil
By F. D. Mahone
MUCH crude oil, as produced from the well, carries varying amounts of water, which may be present as free water in' globules sufficiently large to settle out, in time, if the fluid is allowed to
Jan 7, 1924
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Electric Welding Of Large Storage Tanks
By Harold Price
ONE year ago, that is in January, 1923, there had not been constructed a single oil-storage tank of 55,000-bbl. or more capacity with a completely electric welded roof and bottom. Today, there are at
Jan 6, 1924
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Production Of High-Grade Blast-Furnace Coke
By H. M. Chance
RECENT research work has shown that coal can be produced, at reasonable cost, from almost all coal-mining districts containing not more than 3 to 8 per cent. of ash. From coal so produced, an abundant
Jan 6, 1924