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Industrial Minerals Treatment Methods - A Method for Estimating the Efficiency of Pulverizers (T. P. 810)By Raymond Wilson
Grinding costs are an important item in cement manufacture, and the cost of power is one of the large items in grinding costs. Even where power is of secondary importance, cost items dependent on mill
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Condition of Water in Coals of Various Ranks (With Discussion)By A. W. Gauger
For perhaps one hundred years scientists have been engaged in attempts at devising a satisfactory method of classification of coal. During this time many charts, tables and graphs have been proposed,
Jan 1, 1932
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Development Of A High Performance, Low Maintenance, In-Line Water Spray Cooler For MinesBy John McCoy, Edward Thimons, Kenneth Heller
As the working levels in domestic mines are developed to greater depths and work areas move further from the shafts, maintaining a safe and healthful working environment becomes more difficult. Increa
Jan 1, 1982
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Papers - - Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Production in Kentucky, Ohio and West VirginiaBy V. C. Smith
Reliable and detailed statistical data available for Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia are the most meager and unsatisfactory of any of the producing states. Detailed histories and statistics are avail
Jan 1, 1934
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The Fly-Ash Problem With Domestic Stokers And The Use Of Settling Chambers And Firebox BafflesBy T. S. Spicer, C. C. Wright, R. G. Bowman
IN recent years considerable publicity has been given to the problem of atmospheric pollution by fuel-burning equipment. Legislation has been stimulated and smoke ordinances have been enacted, the pro
Jan 1, 1944
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Paper - Gravity Methods - Gravity Surveying in Great BritainBy H. Shaw
It is now generally recognized that the gravitational method of geophysical surveying is a valuable aid in elucidating the geological structure of the subsoil and enables the practical geologist to de
Jan 1, 1929
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Rate Of Carbon Eliinination And Degree Of Oxidation Of The Metal Bath In Basic Open-Hearth PracticeBy Alexander Field
THE rate of elimination of carbon largely controls the time required to make a heat of steel by the basic open-hearth process and to an important degree determines the cost of refining. Practical expe
Jan 1, 1928
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Papers - Mineral Industry Education - Basic Trends in Mineral Industries Education (With Discussion)By Edward Steidle
It has been said that "the command of nature has been put into the hands of man before he knows how to command himself," and what we see about us gives particular emphasis to this observation. If this
Jan 1, 1934
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Discussions - Institute of Metals Division (page 1560)J. D. Fast and J. L. Meijering (Philips Research Laboratories, N. V. Philips' Gloeilampenfabrieken, Eindhoven, Netherlands)— After the departure of our friend Dijkstra to the United States, inves
Jan 1, 1954
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Data about Labor Employed in Various Bituminous Coal MinesBy Howard Eavenson
The data given in the paper were collected to furnish an idea of the amount required in various operations of bituminous mining to produce a ton of coal, the plants selected being well-managed ones. W
Jan 1, 1924
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Papers - Safety and Health Efforts of the Anaconda Company at Butte (T. P. 993)By John L. Boardman
The Anaconda company has never indulged in any employee activities at Butte which might be termed paternalistic, but it has exerted a vast amount of effort in care of its employees during working hour
Jan 1, 1940
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Mechanical Installations for Gas-lift Pumping as Practiced in the California Oil FieldsBy H. C. Miller
THE gas-lift method of flowing oil from wells is the outstanding feature of petroleum technology today. Its forerunner, the air lift, was used successfully first, in the Baku fields of Russia, in 1899
Jan 1, 1927
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Relations between Stress and Reduction in Area for Tensile Tests of MetalsBy C. W. MacGregor
IN the testing of materials there exist various methods of recording graphically the behavior of a material subjected to tensile stress. Prob-ably the most common method is to plot the tensile stress
Jan 1, 1937
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Coal - Relation of Ash Composition to the Uses of Coal (with Discussion)By A. C. Fieldner, W. A. Selvig
Ash in coal has always becri regarded as an undesirable substance, as the heat content of a coal dccreases in direct proportion to its ash contcnt. It represents so much inert materid that has to be t
Jan 1, 1927
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Iron and Steel Division - The Rate and Mechanism of the Sulfurization of Carbon-Saturated IronBy G. Derge, L. D. Kirkbride
In recent years the problem of sulfur elimination in iron and steel-making has been of increasing importance. This interest has been due to the increasing amounts of sulfur coming into the system via
Jan 1, 1961
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Oil LeasesBy J. Edgar Pew
As MOST of the oil production comes from leased-lands and not fee property, I shall refer to "leases" as covering the producing tracts. To produce oil, leases on land must first be obtained. Well-sel
Jan 8, 1925
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Papers - Smoke Control - Stability of the Atmosphere and Its Influence on Air Pollution (T.P. 2395, Coal Tech., May 1948)By Henry F. Heblby
HOW often has the thoughtful observer pondered the apparent contradictions experienced in the weather? One can take records of two days, one in the winter and one in the summer. The "degree days1&a
Jan 1, 1949
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New York Paper - Mine Fires and Hydraulic Filling (with Discussion)By H. J. Rahilly
Mine fires, in the Butte district, have been a source of trouble and expense for the past thirty years, for while the actual fire area in most of the mines has been comparatively small, the handling o
Jan 1, 1923
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Chicago Paper - Effect of Time and Low Temperature on Physical Properties of Medium-carbon Steel (with Discussion)By G. A. Reinhardt, H. J. Cutler
ThE Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. has produced a large tonnage of 0.35 to 0.45 carbon forging steel, the acceptance of which was based on the physical properties of test specimens obtained by forging th
Jan 1, 1920
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Papers - A Study of the Homogeneity Limits of Wustite (FeO) by X-ray Methods (With Discussion)By Frank Foote, Eric R. Jette
In a recent article,1 the authors reported the results of an X-ray investigation on the range of solid solutions that occurs in the iron-oxygen system in the vicinity of the compound FeO, which freque
Jan 1, 1933