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A Laboratory Study Of The Fracturing Of Rocks By Hydraulic PressureBy A. V. Pegler
As with most rheologically defined materials, rocks react differently in different environments to similar forces. Physical changes and deformations depend as much on the rate of change of stress as t
Jan 1, 1968
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The Platinum MetalsBy Edmund M. Wise
NATURE has provided us with many metals, but with few really good ones, and frequently the better metals are the rarer. It is to this circumstance that many physical metallurgists, inventors, and just
Jan 1, 1953
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Canadian Paper - A Contribution to the Kick versus Rittinger Dispute (with Discussion)By H. E. T. Haultain
The study of rock crushing or grinding in tube-mills is difficult on account of the large size of the units employed in the field and the large number of variables entering into the problem. Three
Jan 1, 1923
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The Seabed Power StruggleBy Robert Poole
On June 20, 1974, delegations representing the governments of 150 nations convened in Caracas, Venezuela. The occasion: the Third United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea. (As this article goes
Jan 9, 1974
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Canadian Paper - A Contribution to the Kick versus Rittinger Dispute (with Discussion)By H. E. T. Haultain
The study of rock crushing or grinding in tube-mills is difficult on account of the large size of the units employed in the field and the large number of variables entering into the problem. Three
Jan 1, 1923
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Detector for Discrimination of Combustion Reactions and the Prevention of Coal Mine ExplosionsBy W. L. Grose, J. E. Nealy
A device developed by the U.S. Bureau of Mines for the detection and quenching of coal mine explosions suffers from the inability to discriminate between the light emitted from hydrocarbon combustion
Jan 1, 1972
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Virginia Beach Paper - Gold-Milling at the North Star Mine, Grass Valley, Nevada County, CalBy Emile Rector Abadie
The picturesque little mining town of Grass Valley, nestled in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains, at an altitude of 2500 feet, has been for 43 years the scene of uninterrupted activity and
Jan 1, 1895
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Papers - Nonferrous Metallurgy - The Present Status of Our Quicksilver Industry, Symposium Arranged by Charles G. Maier (With Discussion)During the war period of quicksilver activity there were a number of departures from what may be termed the classical quicksilver metallurgy. Attempts were made to beneficiate low-grade ores by gravit
Jan 1, 1930
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St. Louis Paper - Analysis of Oil-field Water Problems (with Discussion)By A. W. Ambrose
The underground losses of oil exceed by hundreds of thousands of barrels all the oil that has been lost in storage, transportation, or refining. The quantity lost is, of course, indeterminate; but whe
Jan 1, 1921
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Drilling and Producing – Equipment, Methods, and Materials - Solubility Studies on High Molecular Weight Paraffin Hydrocarbons Obtained from Petroleum Rod WaxesBy C. C. Nathan
Data are resented on the physical properties of five waxes obtained from fields in Texas and Louisiana in which "parafin" troubles are being experienced. The crude parafin was fractionated into three
Jan 1, 1956
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Canadian Paper - South Lorrain Silver District, Ontario (with Discussion)By J. Mackintosh Bell
In the numerous districts subsidiary to Cobalt, and carrying mineral deposits similar in character to that world-famous mining camp, the most interesting recent developments have occurred in South Lor
Jan 1, 1924
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DiscussionDiscussion WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 21, 1951 Ralph E. Grim presiding R. E. GRIM, CHAIRMAN-Has anyone a particularly fruitful point to make or question to ask on any of the papers that have
Jan 1, 1952
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Production Technology - The Resistivity of a Fluid-Filled Porous BodyBy J. E. Owen
A model of a porous body is presented in which the pore space consists of a system of voids and interconnecting tubes. Relationships between porosity and resistivity formation factor are determined pa
Jan 1, 1952
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New York Paper - Sound Steel Ingots. A DiscussionChairman James F. Kemp :—I call upon Prof. Albert Sau-veur to open the general discussion on the subject of sound steel ingots. Albert Sauveur, Cambridge, Mass.:—I believe that I have the privilege
Jan 1, 1914
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Part X – October 1969 - Papers - Microyielding in Polycrystalline CopperBy M. Metzger, J. C. Bilello
Microyielding in 99.999 pct Cu occuwed in two distinct parabolic microstages and was substantially indeoendent of grain size at the relatiz~ely large grain sizes stzcdied. The strain recouered on unlo
Jan 1, 1970
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ThickenersBy Donald L. King
This paper has been prepared with the objective of providing basic information on thickening equipment as applied to mineral processing plant design. Thus, by design, the content is elementary, yet su
Jan 1, 1978
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Lake Champlain (Plattsburgh) Paper - The Late Discovery of Large Quantities of Magnetic and Non-Magnetic Pyrites in the Croton Magnetic Iron MinesBy W. H. Hoffman
During the autumn of 1891, several heavy blasts (each throwing down some 3000 tons of ore) were made on what is known as the Theall side of these mines. Immediately after one of these blasts, the writ
Jan 1, 1893
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Glen Summit Paper - Results of Stream-Measurements of the United States Geological SurveyBy F. H. Newell
Measurements of the amount of water flowing in many of the larger rivers of the west have been made by the United States Geological Survey, and by this means the daily discharges of these rivers have
Jan 1, 1892
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Gold Dredging In California And Methods Devised To Increase Recovery (9d8641e3-1793-4658-85e5-e92e0a6f09e0)By J. A. Woolf, E. S. Leaver
THE purpose of this paper is to describe, in a general way, gold-dredging operations in California, with particular reference to unusual features, including types of deposits and recent attempts to im
Jan 1, 1937
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New York Precious Metals - Use of the Noble Metals and Electrical Contacts (with Discussion)By E. F. Kingsbury
One of the well-known and important uses of the noble or precious metals has been for electrical contacts. In fact, the elements of this group, comprising gold, silver and the six platinum metals, hav