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Postwar Prospects for Fluorspar Are Bright ? Requirements For Hydrofluoric Acid May Soon Exceed Those For SteelmakingBy William H. Waggaman
CURTAILMENT of the mineral industry as a whole undoubtedly will follow world peace, but the output of certain minerals should pursue a course well above the average on any curve of probable output pro
Jan 1, 1945
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Mineral Science And The Future Of MetalsBy Lyman H. Hart
Some of the significant facts that will affect the supply and demand for metals during the next few decades are given in this presentation. This is important because the only hope for intelligent guid
Jan 4, 1973
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Effect of Secondary Copper on the Metal MarketBy PERCY E. BARBOUR
SECONDARY copper1 has &come more or less of a bugbear generally. What is its influence is often the subject of heated argument. The inedapable fact usually quoted is that since in 1929 primary product
Jan 1, 1931
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Effect of Activators and Alizarin Dyes on Soap Flotation of Cassiterite and FluoriteBy Brahm Prakash, R. Schuhmann
Chemical conditions for flotation and nonflotation of cassiterite and fluorite with oleic acid as collector and with alizarin dyes as modifying agents were studied by means of small-scale, vacuum-flot
Jan 1, 1950
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Bolivian Bismuth IndustryBy Johnston, T. L.
BISMUTH is found as native metal associated with tin, copper, cobalt, silver, gold, or other metals and in a variety of ores. The more important ones are: bismuthinite (bismuth glance), Bi2S3; bismite
Jan 1, 1933
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The Mayari And Moa Iron-Ore Deposits In Cuba.By WILLARD HAYES
(Glen Summit Meeting, June, 1911.) THE determination of the question whether the Mayari and Moa mining-claims of the Spanish-American Iron Co. have been rightly denounced under the third section of t
Mar 1, 1911
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Technical Notes - Structure of Some Iridium-Osmium AlloysBy E. Maxwell, C. J. Bechtoldt, H. C. Vacher
IN the course of an investigation of the properties of metals at low temperature there was occasion to determine the constitution of four iridium-osmium alloys. There is very little information in the
Jan 1, 1955
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Preliminary Program, A.I.M.E. Annual MeetingBy AIME AIME
THE American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers will hold its annual meeting in New York City, Feb. 9-12. The technical sessions, excepting the Sunday afternoon and evening sessions of th
Jan 1, 1942
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Part X – October 1968 - Papers - The Free Energy of Formation of ReS2By Juan Sodi, John F. Elliott
The standard free energy of ReS2 has been measured in the range of 1050° to 1250°K using H2/H2S mixtures and a slight variation of the method described by Hager and Elliott.1 The result is: The exp
Jan 1, 1969
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Technical and Commercial Trends in the Junior MetalBy G. C. RIDDELL
THE metallurgist, chemist, and physicist are blazing trails that lead far afield. Pushing on into an "Alloy Age" they see a non-ferrous era over- taking iron and steel. Delving into the nature of the
Jan 1, 1930
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Part III – March 1968 - Papers - Metallurgical and Electronic Properties of Pb1-xSnxTe, Pb1-xSnxSe, and Other IV-VI AlloysBy Alan J. Strauss
The Group IV elements germanium, tin, and lead form nine 1:1 compounds with the Group VI elements sulfur, selenium, and tellurium. This paper reviews the properties of the pseudobinary solid solutions
Jan 1, 1969
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Mexico Awaits YouBy AIME AIME
OPPORTUNITY may not be knocking but it, at least, is waiting for you, your family and your friends in that amazing republic south of the Rio Grande. For the first time we are able to publish the offic
Jan 1, 1936
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Dry-Hot Versus 'Cold-Wet Blast-Furnace Gas CleaningBy Linn Bradley
Introduction MARKED differences of opinion have been expressed by engineers interested in cleaning iron blast-furnace gases for use in hot-blast stoves and under boilers, in reference to the advant
Jan 2, 1917
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No Further Coal-Mining Scholarships But Interest Continues in the PlanBy GEO H. DEIKE
NOT much activity has been evident during the past year in the establishment of co-operative scholarships but the interest among the coal-mining companies is more pronounced than ever. This is apparen
Jan 1, 1943
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Coal Washing In Washington, Oregon, And AlaskaBy M. R. Geer
Coal washing assumed an important role in the mining industry of the Pacific Northwest long before washing practice became firmly established in the Appalachian field. A Scaife washer was operated in
Jan 1, 1949
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Geophysics - Subsurface Investigations of a Plant SiteBy Robert Uhley, Tsvi Meidav, L. Scharon
Before National Lead built an industrial plant on its Fredricktown property, some 100 miles south of St. Louis, a 750x500-ft area on the proposed site was investigated by electrical resistivity, seism
Jan 1, 1960
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Institute of Metals Division - Fracture of MolybdenumBy Robert T. Ault
The nature of fracture in unnotched tensile and notched tensile sheet and round specimens and V -notched and precracked Charpy-type sheet specimens of both wrought stress -relieved and re-crystallized
Jan 1, 1964
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War Demands Bring Changed Attitude Toward Scrap MetalsBy S. M. Shelton
SINCE the Saar started. the real progress in scrap-metal recover is in the change of point of view regarding secondary metals. The tendency had been to regard scrap as the normal outgrowth of obsolesc
Jan 1, 1942
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What Is Wrong With Independent Mining?By Ira B. Joralemon
INDIVIDUALS and small companies have discovered and brought into production the mining districts of the United States. Hardly an exception comes to mind, save for the disseminated copper properties an
Jan 8, 1950