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Papers - Treated Mine Timber at Operations of Lehigh Navigation Coal Company, Inc. (T. P. 1462, with discussion)
By Paul L. Burkhart
THOUGH at an earlier period brief studies had been made by the Lehigh Navigation Coal Company Inc., it was not until 1924 that J. B. Warriner, then general manager, called for a comprehensive study of
Jan 1, 1942
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Effect Of Some Mill Variables On The Earing Of Brass In Deep Drawing
By Cyril Stanley Smith, Earl W. Palmer
STRIP of any of the metals used for deep drawing operations occasionally yields cups that are defective because of a rim that varies in height around the cup in a wave-like manner Some such defects ar
Jan 1, 1942
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Geophysical Education
By Donald C. Bradford
THE place of geophysics in the curriculum of a college or an engineering school has been much discussed. There is uncertainty as to whether the graduate may be called a "geological geophysicist" or a
Jan 1, 1942
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Research On Coal For Domestic Stokers
By Walter Knox, J. D. Doherty
IN 1939, at the request of The Koppers Coal Co., the Koppers Company Research Department established a Stoker Coal Research Laboratory for the purpose of investigating the performance characteristics
Jan 1, 1942
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The Method Of Converting Matte Into Fine And Malleable Copper.
HAVING demonstrated to you above the practice of bringing silver to its ultimate fineness and perfection, it now remains for me to describe how the two kinds of metals that are found in the smelting p
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Recent Developments in the Tennessee Phosphate Industry (T. P. 1053, with discussion).
By Herbert R. Mosley, Paul M. Tyler
Strategically situated in almost the heart of the leading fertilizer-consuming area of the United States, Tennessee long has ranked second only to Florida as a phosphate-producing state. Since 1932 it
Jan 1, 1942
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How Iron Balls Are To Be Made By Casting, For Shooting With Large And Small Guns.
IN order not to deviate from the proposed order both in speaking of melts and of things necessary for guns, I shall tell you at present the method by which iron balls are made. This is surely a very f
Jan 1, 1942
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Production - Foreign - Petroleum Development in Argentina during 1941
By Mario L. Villa
During the year 1941, there was another increase in the production of oil in Argentina, to which the fields in the Comodoro Rivadavia zone in the Territory of Chubut and those of the Provinces of Salt
Jan 1, 1942
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Asphaltic Substances In Crude Oils - Summary
By G. W. Preckshot, N. G. DeLisle, C. E. Cottrell, D. L. Katz
MOST crude oils contain asphaltic substances that may be naturally or artificially precipitated. In the Greeley field, California, this asphaltic bitumen is precipitated during the flow of the oil fro
Jan 1, 1942
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Pennsylvania: Anthracite
Unlike the bituminous part of the coal industry, the production of anthracite has been fairly well publicized; in fact until about 1845 whenever the coal industry of Pennsylvania was mentioned in pape
Jan 1, 1942
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Roasters Eliminated in Smelter Arrangement
By L. R., McLeod
NO important changes in metallurgical practice are exhibited in the smelter that has been erected for treating the Morenci concentrate: the material is charged to reverberatory furnaces without roasti
Jan 1, 1942
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Operation Of Diesel Locomotives Underground
By Fred W. Stiefel
THIS paper covers the operation and maintenance of Diesel locomotives underground on a portion of the Delaware River Aqueduct.[t] This part of the tunnel is r5 miles long, with shafts 14 ft. in diamet
Jan 1, 1942
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Production - Domestic - Development and Production in East and East Central Texas in 1941
By Jr. D. C. Williams, D. V. Carter
The four new oil-field discoveries made in the East and East Central Texas districts during 1941 were the East Long Lake field, Anderson County; Pickering field, Shelby County; Pleasant Grove field, R
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Development With and Against the Pitch at Coal Mines in Southwestern Wyoming (T. P. 1330)
By J. E. Wilson, F. P. Lebar
TYPICAL of southwestern Wyoming are coal structures that dip from 4° to 17°. Those at the Reliance and Winton mines of the Union Pacific Coal Co. average 91/2 and 15°, respectively, and dip almost dir
Jan 1, 1942
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Maryland
The first record of coal anywhere in the Appalachian regions of which we now know is along the north fork of the Potomac River, above the mouth of Savage River, on a map entitled, A Plan of the upper
Jan 1, 1942
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Concerning Vitriol And Its Ore.
VITRIOL is likewise a mineral substance from whose exhalation, according to the opinion of some, are generated and produced the elemental materials or substances which produce metals, particularly gol
Jan 1, 1942
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Driving A Tunnel In Fractured Rock Formation Carrying Water Under High Static Pressure
By P. S. Miller, S. H. Ash
EXTENSIVE and diversified resources justify large populations and great industries. To carry on the business of commerce and meet the demands of large populations, the utilization of tunnels in some f
Jan 1, 1942
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The Procedure And Method Of Welding Cracked Bells.
AFTER the aforementioned subjects, I wish to speak to you of the method of welding bells that are cracked. This seems to me an ingenious thing, little used, but of great usefulness. Bells are cracked
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Mining Anthracite on Pitching and Flat Seams over Mined-out Areas (T. P. 1365)
By W. H. Moore, E. T. Powell
IN the early days of mining in the Anthracite field, only the thicker and better seams of coal were mined, because of the limited mining and coal-cleaning facilities, therefore many of the thinner and
Jan 1, 1942