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IC 7150 Some Information On The Causes And Prevention Of Fires And Explosions In The Petroleum Industry ? IntroductionBy G. M. Kintz
It is estimated that 10,000 lives were lost and $285,000,000 worth of property was destroyed by fire in 1937. Of the 103 fatalities in tie petroleum industry in 1938, 36 resulted from fires and explos
Jan 1, 1941
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The Rise of the State Schools (52b7bcb6-b923-4b04-b568-7b99598a5b68)By Thomas T., Read
ANY discussion of State-supported schools of mining and A metallurgy needs to be prefaced by a definition, since the first school to offer a mining curriculum, the Pennsylvania Polytechnic College, wa
Jan 1, 1941
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The Treatment of Refractory Ores at the Hard Rock Gold MineBy C. H. Madsen
THE Hard Rock gold mine is in the Little Long Lac mining area, Thunder Bay district, northwestern Ontario. It is four miles by road from the town of Geraldton, which is on the Canadian National railwa
Jan 1, 1941
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The End of the Century (8b444765-b921-401b-b94c-3816957c5e9d)By Thomas T., Read
THE decades immediately before and after the end of the nineteenth century (1890-1910) were a period of increased activity in mineral industry education. One reason for ,this, undoubtedly, was the rap
Jan 1, 1941
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Detection and Prevention of Early PlumbismBy K. Raht
LEAD poisoning is perhaps the oldest and, until recent years, the most misunderstood of all industrial diseases. Hippocrates appears to have recognized a relationship in the colic experienced by a pat
Jan 1, 1941
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Other Schools (7cbabd85-a693-4911-a91a-2cce3c4633d4)By Thomas T., Read
IT is difficult to judge how much influence the success attained during its first year, 1864-65, by the School of Mines at Columbia had on developments in education for the mineral industry elsewhere
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - San Mauricio Mining Company, José Pañganiban, Camarines Norte. P.I. (T.P. 1187)By D. L. Gardner, H. L. Barr
The following report covers the history of the development of the mine, present equipment, methods and costs of mining and milling. In addition, a description of the ore deposit is given with emphasis
Jan 1, 1941
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Tin at the Sullivan ConcentratorBy H. R. Banks
SHORTLY after the commencement of operations at the Sullivan concentrator, the use of a pilot table was instituted in order to present a visual control of various products by showing the amount of gal
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Coalescence Process for Producing Semifabricated Oxygen-free Copper (T.P. 1217)By John Tyssowski
In 1925, Harry Howard Stout, then metallurgist for Phelps Dodge Corporation, while investigating the cleaning of cathode copper by various gases at elevated temperatures below the melting point of the
Jan 1, 1941
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The Beginnings Of Mineral Industry EducationBy Thomas T., Read
THE education of adolescents to perform the duties and assume the responsibilities of maturity has been a characteristic of human society since the dawn of history. In the beginning the members of the
Jan 1, 1941
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Unsuccessful Ventures (eaf809f9-9a73-4906-9ae0-29c50f19a11b)By Thomas T., Read
THROUGHOUT the Colonial era, Philadelphia was easily , the leading city of North America, and it still held that position at the end of the period, with a population of about 25,000, though closely pr
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Engineering Research - A Preliminary Report on the Application of the Mass Spectrometer to Problems in the Petroleum Industry (T.P. 1205)By Harlod Washburn, Herbert Hoover
This paper is in the nature of a rough preliminary report on the progress that has been made in the application of the mass spectrometer to various problems arising in the petroleum industry. A few ye
Jan 1, 1941
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Education for the Petroleum Industry (a1221f1c-e785-4d3f-96da-6d1a4f800ee7)By Thomas T., Read
E DUCATION for the mineral industry was at first a single comprehensive curriculum, but it was early recognized that the main basis of mining is physics, while that of metallurgy is chemistry. The fir
Jan 1, 1941
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Morning Session ? Friday, June 27, 1941 - Shake It for ResultsBy William M. Wallace
Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen: The subject, "Shake It for Results," may or may not suggest just what is to be shaken, or just what results are to be obtained. I can assure you that if you are thinking a
Jan 1, 1941
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IC 7154 Strategic Minerals Investigations - Progress Report On Exploration Of Tin Deposits ? IntroductionIn connection with tin strategic minerals investigations of the Bureau of Mines and the Geological Survey under authority of the Strategic Materials Act (Public 117, 76th Cong., 1st sess.) a study is
Jan 1, 1941
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Narrow Vein Stoping at No. 2 Mine, Central Patricia Gold Mines, LimitedBy J. R. MacDonald
MINING literature contains very few descriptions of operations producing as little as 25 to 30 tons of ore per day. The purpose of this paper is to discuss the gradual development of a mining method f
Jan 1, 1941
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IC 7177 Marketing Graphite ? Kinds Of GraphiteBy Paul M. Tyler
Graphite is chemically identical with diamond, both being crystallized allotropic forms of carbon. Graphite obviously differs greatly from diamond in physical properties and is easily recognized by it
Jan 1, 1941
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Recent Mining and Metallurgical Education (b2da2345-6cf3-4b1f-bf03-a78c369a2d6f)By Thomas T., Read
IT will be recalled that the first professor of metallurgy in the United States, appointed in 1855, never really gave any instruction in metallurgy and gradually turned into a professor of mineralogy.
Jan 1, 1941
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IC 7171 Developments In The American Petroleum Industry, 1914-19 Exploration, Drilling, Production, And Transportation (A Review And Digest) ? BackgroundBy H. C. Fowler
Technical developments in the American petroleum industry as regards exploration, drilling, production, and transportation were characterized by many anomalous conditions during the half decade 1914-1
Jan 1, 1941
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IC 7172 Developments In Petroleum Refining Technology In The United States, 1914-19 ? IntroductionBy A. J. Kraemer
Few important improvements other than the development of cracking processes were made in technical petroleum refining from 1914 to 1919. Refiners were concerned mainly with enlarging their plants and
Jan 1, 1941