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Properties of Coal and Impurities in Relation to PreparationBy D. E. Wolfson, H. J. Gluskoter, M. R. Geer, John A. Harrison, H. F. Yancey, I. S. Latimer
When this chapter was prepared for the kst edition in 1942, continuous mining machines virtually were unknown, and hand loading in underground mines, which gave an opportunity to discard impurities, a
Jan 1, 1968
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Utilization Of Geology By Mining Companies - Part I - General ConsiderationsBy Donald H. McLaughlin, Reno H. Sales
ADAPTATION to mining needs of the rich store of geologic knowledge concerning mineral deposits and the application of principles of the science to specific problems in the finding, development and sto
Jan 1, 1933
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Paper - Seismic Methods - Seismic Method of Mapping Geologic StructureBy Donald C. Barton
The elastic earth waves produced naturally by earthquakes have been used for a long time as evidence from which to draw conclusions in ; regard to the constitution of the interior and crust of the ear
Jan 1, 1929
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Colorado Paper - Electrostatic Precipitation (with Discussion)By O. H. Eschholz
The electrostatic process of fume precipitation is an excellent example of the successful application of scientific knowledge to an industrial operation. Originally proposed for the precipitation of s
Jan 1, 1919
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Heat Treatment Of Rock-Drill SteelBy George H. Gilman
THE campaign now being waged to improve the quality of the rock-drill bit is the natural outcome f the scientific development of the drilling machine during the past twenty years. In this development
Jan 6, 1921
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Papers - Recrystallization Texture of Aluminum after Compression (T. P. 1141, with discussion)By Charles S. Barrett
Recrystallization textures—thc orientations of grains after recrys-tallization—have been studied extensively not only because of their metallurgical importance but also because of the information they
Jan 1, 1940
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The Significance Of The Mineral Industries In The EconomyBy Charles White Merrill
Mankind's progress is measured in minerals. Man's emergence from prehistory is marked by passage through a Stone Age and a Bronze Age and into the present era, sometimes called the Iron Age
Jan 1, 1959
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Silica and SiliconBy T. D. Murphy
The element silicon, with its usual partner, oxygen, plays the same role on this planet relative to inorganic materials as carbon and hydrogen play with respect to living organisms. The crystallograph
Jan 1, 1975
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Porphyry Copper Deposits Of The Andean OrogenINTRODUCTION The regional characteristics of porphyry copper deposits in South America southward from Pantanos and Pegadorcito, Columbia, will be summarized. The age of formation of deposits spans
Jan 1, 1978
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The Progress Of The Metallurgy Of Iron And SteelBy Sir Robert Hadfield
Introduction.-I esteem it a great honor to be asked by this Institute to give them an address chiefly devoted to metallurgy. While it is with great regret that I find myself unable to be present to de
Jan 5, 1914
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Reservoir Engineering–General - Transient Response of Nonhomogeneous AquifersBy T. D. Mueller
Many investigators have used the response of the "dimensionless aquifer" to a unit pressure drop or a unit fluid-withdrawal volume to calculate the performance of an aquifer in supplying water influx
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New York Paper - Ternary Systems of Lead-antimony and a Third Constituent (with Discussion)By E. H. Roberts, L. G. Swenson, F. C. Nix, R. A. Morgen
The binary system lead-antimony has been the subject of comprehensive investigations in these laboratories by Dean1 and his associates. The effect of a third constituent on this system, particularly o
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New Haven Paper - The Lodes of Cripple CreekBy T. A. Rickard
In a former paper* the writer has described the essential features of the general geology of the Cripple Creek region. In the present account it is intended to examine into the occurrence of the ores,
Jan 1, 1903
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Aging And The Yield Point In Steel - IntroductionBy J. R. Low, M. Gensamer
During the course of an investigation into the drawability of automobile-body sheet steel, it became apparent that certain advantages would be possessed by a deep-drawing steel with a very low yield s
Jan 1, 1943
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Papers - Microhardness of Bearing Alloys (T. P. 966, with discussion)By L. L. Swift
.It the present time there are four base metals being used for automo-tive bearing alloys. Of course there are numerous variations in the amounts of alloying elements added to each base metal and near
Jan 1, 1939
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Production Engineering - Sampling Gas-condensate Wells (T. P. 1374, with discussion)By J. M. Flaitz, A. S. Parks
OF the various methods of sampling gas-condensate wells, a method that secures a continuous representative sample of the well stream is desirable. Such a method, consisting of a sampling tube introduc
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Blast Furnace and Raw Materials - Correlations of Some Coke Properties with Blast-furnace Operation (T.P. 1402)By Hjalmar W. Johnson
It has long been accepted that blastfurnace practice varies to some degree with the coke used. While the qualities desirablc in iron have been known for some time, the qualities in coke that produce s
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Theory and Interpretation - Wall Rock Alteration at Butte, Montana (Mining Tech., May 1948, T.P. 2400, with discussion)By Reno H. Sales, Charles Meyer
AT Butte, successive zones of sericitized and argillized quartz monzonite occur around every ore-bearing fracture regardless of its size, attitude, or relative age. The two types of alteration always
Jan 1, 1949
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Papers - Comminution - Characteristics of Screen-circuit Products (T. P. 1820, Min. Tech., May 1945)By Albert E. Reed
The development of the modern highspeed vibrating screen, together with the increasing availability of long-lasting stainless-steel screen cloth for relatively fine-mesh separations, means that more s
Jan 1, 1947
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New York Paper - Geology and Ore Deposits of Mohave County, Arizona (with Discussion)By Frank C. Schrader
Page Introduction.............................. 196 Geology of the District......................... 196 Ore Deposits of the District....................... 198 Gcncral Description................
Jan 1, 1917