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RI 2406 TitaniumBy Robert J. Anderso
Few elements have received more attention and developed greater interest in the last ten years than titanium. The substantially pure metal has been din...ie. cult to isolate, and so far has been littl
Oct 1, 1922
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RI 2458 Abstracts from the Literature on Treatment of Manganese-Silver OresBy Alphonso Cornejo, Galen H. Clevenger
This bibliography was compiled in connection with an investigation of the Caron process for the treatment of manganese - silver ores , conducted by the T. S. Bureau of Mines in cooperation with the Ne
Mar 1, 1923
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RI 2462 The Treatment Of Natural- Gas Gasoline To Meet The Doctor Test. ? IntroductionBy D. B. Dow
The presence of sulphur compounds in petroleum and its products is, generally speaking, undesirable, and the problems involved in removing such compounds are of great importance to the petroleum refin
Jan 1, 1923
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RI 2524 Progress in Blast-Furnace ResearchBy S. P. Kinney, P. H. Royster, T. L. Joseph
An investigation of the production of iron in the blast furnace is obviously not an easy subject for research . Enough is known of the mechanical , thermal and chemical conditions existing inside the
Sep 1, 1923
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RI 2567 The Danger of Open Lamps In Coal MinesBy L. C. IlsLey, M. W. Von Bernewitz
"Introduction.Several hundred thousand open lights are daily carried in coal mines of the United States, each lamp being a menace to life and property through fire or explosion. They have been respons
Jan 1, 1924
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RI 2569 Lignite CarbonizationBy W. W. Odell
"It is common knowledge that extensive lignite deposits occur in the States of Montana, North and South Dakota and Texas. The total area of these deposits and the total amount of lignite in them is so
Feb 1, 1924
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RI 2575 Tests Of Lignite Char As Reduction Fuel In The Smelting Of Zinc Ores"For a good many years the Bureau of Mines and various state mining experi¬ment stations have endeavored to develop some method of utilizing the immense deposits of lignite in the United States. Work
Feb 1, 1924
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RI 2578 A Process From The Production Of Sponge Iron.By Clyde E. Williams
[As a results of work conducted during the past three years, the Northwest Experiment Station of the Bureau of Mines, in cooperation with the University of Washington at Seattle, Washington, has devel
Jan 1, 1924
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RI 2646 Special SandsBy W. M. Weigel
"Sand is one of the most useful and, fortunately, one of the most common mineral commodities. By far the largest proportion of the production is used in construction, including all forms of building,
Oct 1, 1924
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RI 2656 The Production Of Sponge IronBy Bernard M. Larsen, Clyde F. Williams, Edward P. Barrett
"Introduction.The Bureau of Mines at its Northwest Experiment station has been studying the production of sponge iron for the past four years, and during 1923 progress advanced to the point industrial
Nov 1, 1924
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RI 2691 Recent Developments In The Production And Consumption Of Abrasive GarnetBy C. O. Anderson, W. M. Meyers
Since 1922, when a brief report3 on the production and utilization of garnet was issued by the Bureau of Mines, there have been a number of interest—in developments in the technology of that mineral.
Jun 1, 1925
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RI 2718 Diatomaceous EarthBy C. W., Davie
"DEFINITIONDiatomaceous earth consists almost entirely of the silicious remains of minute flowerless aquatic plants known as diatoms. The name diatomaceous earth, therefore, is to be preferred to othe
Nov 1, 1925
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RI 2769 Gas-Making And Fuel Problems Of The Gas Industry Of California ? IntroductionBy Wm. W. Odell
A study of certain gas making and fuel problems peculiar to the gas industry of California has been made by the Bureau of Mines. The work was done at the request of, and in cooperation with The Califo
Jan 1, 1926
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RI 2789 Charging Explosives In Drill Holes Of Drift Rounds In Metal Mines ? IntroductionBy E. D. Gardner
The Bureau of nines, in cooperation with the mining companies of the Southwest, is conducting an investigating to ascertain the safest and most economical explosives to use in metal mines, and to asce
Jan 1, 1927
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RI 2794 Some Feldspathic Materials Of The Pacific Northwest ? IntroductionBy Hewitt Wilson
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Jan 1, 1927
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RI 2798 The Use Of Flocculating Reagents For The Recovery Of Fine MicaBy W. M. Myers
[The principle of the application of electrolytes for deflocculation of fine materials in order that impurities may settle out, and the subsequent flocculation of the suspended particles by a differen
Jan 1, 1927
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RI 2859 Portable Electric Cap Lamps In Alabama ? IntroductionBy Frank E. Cash
The Bureau of Mines in its safety work has for a number of years advocated and recommended the use of permissible portable electric cap lamps for use in all mines. In the course of time required for t
Jan 1, 1928
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RI 2910 Potash From New Jersey Greensand Preliminary ReportBy J. R. Thoenen
"The curtailment of imports of foreign potash during the World War directed attention to the necessity of establishing a domestic source of potash for fertilizer, and considerable study has been given
Feb 1, 1929
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RI 3024 Dissolution Of Various Manganese Minerals ? IntroductionBy C. W. Davis
This is the first of a series of papers being; prepared as the work progresses in a study of the hydrometallurgy of manganese. The investigation is being made in an endeavor to make possible the utili
Jan 1, 1930
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RI 3042 Extinction of Methane Flame by Dichloro-DifluoroBy G. St. J. Perrott, G. W. Jones
"In the course of its investigations pertaining to the promotion of safety the Bureau of Mines is actively engaged in investigating all promising materials that may be of value in rendering methane or
Oct 1, 1930