Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Sedimentary Deposits - Part I - Placer Deposits Of The Western United StatesBy J. T. Pardee
INTRODUCTION PLACER is a Spanish word, the definitions of which include "an extensive bank of sand or gravel" and "a place where currents of water deposit particles of gold."l The term, probably f
Jan 1, 1933
-
Papers - Geology of the Gold Quartz Veins of Cornucopia (T.P. 1035)By G. E. Goodspeed
The Cornucopia gold quartz veins form a parallel vein system traversing meta-morphic and granodioritic rocks. Field and petrographic evidence suggests that inetasomatism has played an important role b
Jan 1, 1941
-
Papers - Geology of the Gold Quartz Veins of Cornucopia (T.P. 1035)By G. E. Goodspeed
The Cornucopia gold quartz veins form a parallel vein system traversing meta-morphic and granodioritic rocks. Field and petrographic evidence suggests that inetasomatism has played an important role b
Jan 1, 1941
-
New York Paper - Effect of Finishing Temperatures of Rails on Their Physical Properties and Microstructure (with Discussion)By W. R. Shimer
In his valuable report on Finishing Temperatures and Properties of Rails,l Dr. G. X. Burgess, Chief of the Division of Metallurgy, U. S. Bureau of Standards, has begun a line of investigation which sh
Jan 1, 1915
-
Part III - Papers - Electroluminescence of Iron-Sulfur Diffused GaAs JunctionsBy Hans Strack
Electroluminescence of GaAs p-n junctions fabricated by simultaneous diffusion of sulfur and iron was investigated at 77°K. A narrow emission peak with a half width of about 4 kT in the energy range b
Jan 1, 1968
-
Papers - Flotation Therory and Practices - Reactions of Xanthates with Sulfide MineralsBy Walter E. Duncan, Oscar F. Tangel, A. M. Gaudin, Franklin Dewey, R. A. Johnson
Xanthates have been used as collectors of sulfide minerals in the concentration of ores by flotation for over a decade, yet much remains to be done to elucidate the underlying reasons for the remarkab
Jan 1, 1935
-
New York Paper - Wire Rope and Safety in Hoisting at Butte Mines (with Discussion)By W. N. Tanner
The wire-rope hoisting conditions at the mines of the Anaconda Coppcr Mining Co. in Butte, Mont, are very severe because of the conditions under which it is necessary to operate. A study was made, in
Jan 1, 1923
-
New York Paper - Wire Rope and Safety in Hoisting at Butte Mines (with Discussion)By W. N. Tanner
The wire-rope hoisting conditions at the mines of the Anaconda Coppcr Mining Co. in Butte, Mont, are very severe because of the conditions under which it is necessary to operate. A study was made, in
Jan 1, 1923
-
Papers - Solubility of Oxygen in Solid CopperBy F. N. Rhines
Despite the large amount of study which has been devoted to the subject our present knowledge of the copper-oxygen system remains incomplete and unsatisfactory .in many respects. This applies particul
Jan 1, 1934
-
San Francisco Paper - Conditions of Stable Equilibrium in Iron-carbon AlloysBy H.A. Schwartz
From time to time, one of the authors has had occasion to investigate the graphitizing reaction and has published the results mainly as discussion' of the work of other investigators. In view, th
Jan 1, 1923
-
San Francisco Paper - Conditions of Stable Equilibrium in Iron-carbon AlloysBy H. A. Schwartz
From time to time, one of the authors has had occasion to investigate the graphitizing reaction and has published the results mainly as discussion' of the work of other investigators. In view, th
Jan 1, 1923
-
Technical Notes - Textures in Cold Rolled Copper and 70-30 Alpha BrassBy W. R. Hibbard
T has been proposed1 on the basis of slip and flow I- that the ideal deformation texture of cold rolled face-centered cubic metals is (110) [112]. As pointed out recently by Brick,' this theory d
Jan 1, 1951
-
Papers - Nonmetallic Minerals - Barite in CaliforniaBy Walter W. Bradley
Barite, or barytes as it is sometimes called, belongs to one of the lesser groups of nonmetallic minerals, of which 15 to 20 varieties are mined in California in amounts varying in value from a few hu
Jan 1, 1931
-
Papers - Production - Domestic - West Texas Oil Development in 1937By B. B. Zavoico, J. G. H. Crump, P. P. Gregory
West Texas was the scene of greatly increased oil activity during 1937, producing 75,743,000 bb1.l in that year as compared with 61,901,-000 bb1.2 in 1936, an increase of 22.36 per cent. The annual to
Jan 1, 1938
-
Papers - Mining - Subsidence from Pillar Extraction at Montour No. 10 Mine Adjacent to theBy H. C. Howarth
This paper gives observations on ground movement and subsidence resulting from pillar drawing in the Lick Run section of Montour No. 10 mine of the Pittsburgh Coal Co. adjacent to solid coal owned by
Jan 1, 1934
-
Preface to Third EditionBy William E. Ford
The first edition of this book appeared in 1877 and approximately twenty years later (1898) the second and revised edition was published. Now, again after more than twenty years, comes the third editi
Jan 1, 1922
-
Problems Connected With The Recovery Of Petroleum From Unconsolidated Sands (c9a93095-9e12-4e1b-a1a5-14ce480d9d19)By William H. Kobbé
THE CHAIRMAN (M. L. REQUA, San Francisco, Cal.).-We have had in California a great deal of trouble from the breaking. off and collapsing of well casings from shifting sand, and it is quite true with u
Jan 4, 1917
-
Extraction of Uranium from a Low Grade Ore with H2S04-H202 in an Agitated ReactorBy C. A. Eligwe, F. W. DeVries, A. E. Torma
This study is an investigation on using hydrogen peroxide for tank-leaching of uranium with sulfuric acid. The optimum sulfuric acid concentration was found to be 0.03 mole 11 -'for a 25% pulp de
Jan 1, 1980
-
Papers - Unitization - Some Developments and Operating Economies of Unit OperationBy Sam Harlan
At intervals during the past several years the oil industry has been confronted with the problem of forestalling crises in its affairs. These crises have been reduced to periods of depression which, f
Jan 1, 1930
-
PART VI - Effect of Rhenium on the Interface Energies of Chromium, Molybdenum, and TungstenBy B. C. Allen
The interface energies of chronzium, molybdenunz. hugsten, and their solid-solution alloys Cv-35Re, MO-33Re, and UJ-25Re were studied at 0.6 to 1.0 of the absolllte liquidus ter)zpe,vature using fiz&a
Jan 1, 1967