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Letters To The Editor – For The RecordI HIT the ceiling when I opened my November MINING ENGINEERING and after waiting a week to cool off I' still find it necessary to express my resentment of the gross libel embodied in the editoria
Jan 1, 1952
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Non-ferrous Metallurgy - Anaconda Electrolytic White LeadBy R. G. Bowman
Discussions of processes for the manufacture of white lead generally open with the statement that white lead is the oldest chemical pigment known to man. This fact is of more than historical interest;
Jan 1, 1926
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The Hardinge Conical Pebble-Mill.By H. W. Hardinge
DISREGARDING for the present the economic side of a new device, let us turn to that feature of the conical pebble-mill which is of interest from a scientific point of view, and consider the device as
Jan 7, 1908
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Diamonds In Arkansas.By George F. Kunz
THE recently discovered occurrence of diamonds near Murfreesboro, Pike county, Ark., was brought to. our attention by Mr. Samuel W. Reyburn (Trustee for Messrs. C. S. Stifft, A. D. Cohn, August Zinsse
Mar 1, 1908
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Manufacture And Tests Of Silica Brick For The Byproduct Coke OvenBy Kenneth Seaver
(San Francisco Meeting, September, 1915) INTRODUCTION IT is rather gratifying that in the field of the manufacture 'of refractories, in which, as a whole, foreign practice has surpassed us, the
Jan 9, 1915
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Industrial Minerals - Why Geology in the Cement Industry?By K. N. Weaver
In the early 1950's the cement industry began putting a new emphasis on geology. This article points up some of the industry's raw materials problems that geologists are uniquely qualified t
Jan 1, 1965
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Minerals Beneficiation (63a8a76a-b46b-4409-a16d-a7c63a87142d)By Burt C. Mariacher
To note that environmental considerations had a major im¬pact on the minerals processing industry in 1971 would be something less than a profound observation. The degree of its importance was demonstr
Jan 2, 1972
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Robert Howland Leach ? Chairman, Institute of Metals Division, A.I.M.E.By AIME AIME
TRAINED as a mining engineer and with no little experience in the field of mining, his interests and activities later transferred to the alloying, fabrication, and physical metallurgy of nonferrous me
Jan 1, 1939
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The Selection And Sizing Of Conveyors And StackersBy Lawrence K. Nordell
This paper reviews practices used In the selection and sizing of belt conveyors and stacker systems commonly used in crushing and grinding plant facilities. Historical and modern methods of sizing thi
Jan 1, 1982
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DiscussionThe Role of the Drilling Contractor BY FERRIS E. SAINSBURY Ron Haxby, Occidental Minerals What is the best method for drilling a 12-in. diam hole to a depth of 1200 ft and maintaining the deflecti
Jan 1, 1979
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Lake Superior Paper - Rail Specifications and Rail Inspection in EuropeBy C. P. Sandberg
Notwithstanding the growing importance of this subject, no work specially devoted to it has hitherto been published. Having had to inspect during the last twenty years nearly a million tons of iron an
Jan 1, 1881
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Rail Specifications And Rail Inspection In EuropeBy C. P. Sandberg
INTRODUCTION. NOTWITHSTANDING the growing importance of this subject, no work specially devoted to it has hitherto been published. Having had to inspect during the last twenty years nearly a millio
Jan 1, 1881
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Mining and Milling at Broken Hill, AustraliaBy M. W. BERNEWITZ
IT is 27 years since I last visited Broken Hill, New South Wales, one of the world's greatest lead-silver-zinc districts. Then, the flota¬tion of ores was in its infancy. The Minerals Separation
Jan 1, 1935
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Methods for Determining Oxygen in Steel ? a Progress ReportBy J. G. Thompson
PROJECT 8411 of the U. S. Bureau of Standards, sponsored by the Iron and Steel Division of the A.I.M.E., is an attempt to define more concisely than has been possible heretofore the accuracy and the L
Jan 1, 1934
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Technical Papers and Notes - Extractive Metallurgy Division - The Reduction of Cupric Salts in Aqueous Perchlorate and Sulfate Solutions by Molecular HydrogenBy E. R. Macgregor, J. Halpern
The kinetics of the reduction of cupric salts in aqueous solution by molecular hydrogen to metallic copper are described. The rate of reduction appears to be homogeneously determined and shows a marke
Jan 1, 1959
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Industrial Minerals - Relationship of Hardness, Friability and Particle Size to the Abrasive Performance of Diatomaceous SilicaBy F. R. Hutto Jr., F. L. Kady Jr., L. E. Weymouth
The behavior of particulate non-metallic materials in moving contact with smooth surfaces is of interest and concern to manufacturers and users of abrasives, of fillers, and of pigments alike. The the
Jan 1, 1961
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Iron and Steel - The Current Theories of the Hardening of Steel Thirty Years Later (with Discussion)By Albert Sauveur
My first paper dealing with the theories of the hardening of steel by rapid cooling was published in the Transactions of this Institute in 1896— 30 years ago-under the title "The Microstructure of Ste
Jan 1, 1926
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Note Upon The Cost Of Iron Rails - As Made In 1866, In A Leading English Railway Company's Rolling MillBy P. Barnes
(Read at the Wilkes-Barre Meeting, May, 1877.) THE tabular statement accompanying this note shows the money cost in each of the three departments of manufacture, of 17 leading items, and also the p
Jan 1, 1878
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Airplane Service to Idaho Mining CampsBy Robert L. Dean
THE pioneer mining company in Idaho to use airplanes extensively is the Yellow Pine project at Stibnite now owned by the Bradley interests. From 1901 to 1903 the gold boom at Thunder Mountain, in cent
Jan 1, 1935
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Proceedings of 121st MeetingBy AIME AIME
T HE 121st meeting of the Institute held in New York City, February 16 to 19, 1920, was a great success despite vicissitudes of weather of unusual severity. On account of tremendous snowstorms, only t
Jan 1, 1920