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Institute Policy on Controversial Matters (ea260071-92c1-4b81-90cb-436167e95582)At its meeting on February 21, 1933, the Board of Directors the following resolution defining and expressing the policy of the Institute with respect to official participation or action in controversi
Jan 1, 1944
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Institute Policy on Controversial Matters (00063ee1-f101-4423-a759-397a73c322c9)At its meeting on February 21, 1933, the Board of Directors the following resolution defining and expressing the policy of the Institute with respect to official participation or action in controversi
Jan 1, 1941
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Drift of ThingsBy Charles M. Cooley
DURING the last week in April, cards were sent out from New York to Institute members affiliated with the Mining, Geology, and Geophysics Div. The cards requested recipients to indicate their main tec
Jan 6, 1953
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Offshore Prospecting And Mining Laws Of The United States - Sometimes Hazy, Sometimes Lacking, They Often Confuse ProspectorsBy J. Leslie Goodier
The International Law of the Continental Shelf, so far ratified by 35 nations, extends the national boundary of any coastal nation to the edge of the continental shelf, this normally being at a contin
Jan 7, 1968
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Part II – February 1968 - Papers - The Solubility of Aluminum in Cryolite MeltsBy M. Yokoi, K. Yoshida, T. Ishihara
The solubility of aluminum in cryolite melts has been determined by measuring the weight loss of aluminum submerged in melts contained in closed silicon nitride crucibles. The solubility in pure cryo
Jan 1, 1969
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New Haven Paper - AmarilliumBy William M. Courtis
While assaying some copper carbonate ore from the Frazer claims, Similakameen, B. C., I noticed that on parting the gold button a deep orange solution was formed. The button gave off pink bands in the
Jan 1, 1903
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Iron and Steel Division - The Solubility of Oxygen in Liquid Iron Containing Aluminum - DiscussionBy D. C. Hilty, W. Crafts
J. Chipman—It has been my privilege to discuss this work with the authors on several occasions and to observe at first hand the experimental methods employed. I wish, therefore, to emphasize certain p
Jan 1, 1951
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The Storage Of Anthracite Coal.By R. V. Norris
1. INTRODUCTION. THE anthracite coal trade, with a shipment averaging about 70,000,000 tons per year, differs essentially from other coal business, in the fact that the larger sizes, comprising about
Jun 1, 1911
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Liquidus Determinations In Zinc-Rich Alloys (Zn-Fe; Zn-Cu; Zn-Mn)By Gerald Edmunds
THE liquidus line on the phase diagram for temperature versus composition of a binary alloy system, representing the boundary between the homogeneous melt and the heterogeneous melt plus solid, beside
Jan 1, 1944
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Part II – February 1968 - Communication - Crystallography of Shock CompressionBy William J. Gillich, Gerald L. Moss
PREVIOUS studies of the shock loading of randomly oriented polycrystalline aggregates have firmly established that, after rather short load duration, hydrostatic compression closely approximates the s
Jan 1, 1969
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Minerals Beneficiation - Hydroxamate vs. Fatty Acid Flotation of Iron OxideBy R. W. Harper, M. C. Fuerstenau, J. D. Miller
Data were obtained with hematite with octyl hydroxamate and oleate as collectors to determine the mechanism of collector adsorption and also to establish the roles that conditioning time and temperatu
Jan 1, 1971
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Why Use Centrifuges for Dewatering Yellow Cake?By Robert F. Brindisi
There are approximately thirty to forty operating mills in the United States which are currently producing uranium yellow cake. This figure includes a significant number of in situ and by-product oper
Jan 1, 1980
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Copper-Manganese-Zinc Alloys - Physical Properties Of Wrought Copper-Rich AlloysBy J. R. Long, T. R. Graham, R. S. Dean
FOLLOWING the development of elec¬trolytic manganese production by the Bureau of Mines, an extensive program was planned to study the character of this high-purity product and its possible utilization
Jan 1, 1947
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Papers - Coalesced Copper-Its History, I'roduction and Characteristics (T.P. 1238, with discussion)By H. H. Stout
In the early fall of 1925, the writer was conducting, in the Ledoux and Co. laboratory, New York, experiments directed toward ascertaining the effect on its impurity content when cathode copper was su
Jan 1, 1941
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Lead - Sulphur Dioxide in Gases from a Dwight-Lloyd Machine Sintering a Low-sulphur Charge (Metals Technology, Aug. 1942.) (With discussion)By Reed W. Hyde
Some information has been published on the sulphur dioxide concentration of gases from D wight-Lloyd machines sintering lead ores but most of this relates to the customary practice in which the charge
Jan 1, 1944
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Institute of Metals Division - Dislocations in Ruby Laser CrystalsBy K. R. Janowski, H. Conrad
As part of a program to establish the effect of crystal imperfections on laser output, a detailed study was made of the dislocation structure of ruby crystals obtained from varioius sources. Using K
Jan 1, 1964
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Industrial Minerals - Synthesis of Some FerritesBy Arthur Tauber, Horst Kedesdy
FERRITES are sintered metallic oxides of the spinel structure type1 and belong to the class of soft ferromagnetic materials. Similar to a ceramic, they can be formed and fired to a dense body, exhibit
Jan 1, 1958
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Roanoke, Va. Paper - Biographical Notice of Louis Gruner, Inspector-General of Mines of FurnaceBy T. Egleston
I HAVE to announce with great regret that our distinguished honorary member, Louis Gruner, died in Paris in March last. The Institute, in his death, has lost one of the first as well as one of the gre
Jan 1, 1884
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Structure and Properties of Iron-Rich Alloys - Ar" in Chromium Steels (Metals Technology, February 1945) (With discussion)By Alexander R. Troiano, Eugene P. Klier
Since the very early work on quenched structures, where the products of the martensite transformation had been recognizedl this transformation has provoked much interest and study. Theoretically it wa
Jan 1, 1945
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Papers - Theory and Interpretation - The Alleged Mineral Zoning at Mount Isa (Mining Tech., Nov. 1943, T.P. 1652)By Roland Blanchard
Recent discovery at Mount Isa of copper mineralization in commercial amount at a depth of 1000 ft., coinciding with downward termination of ore at about the same depth within the larger silver-lead-zi
Jan 1, 1949