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Annual Review – Underground Mining in 1955By Elmer A. Jones
Like the caboose on the end of a long freight train L made up of mineral and metal processing and consuming industries, the mining industry progresses according to the movement of the train to which i
Feb 1, 1956
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New York Paper - Origin of PegmatiteBy John B. Hastings
The occurrellce of such a large amount of gold in the Hart-eel granite, even though the surmised existence of similar areas is not new, brings freshly to mind the pegmatite type of mag-matic different
Jan 1, 1909
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PART I – Papers - Temperature Dependence of Elastic Moduli of Ruthenium, Rhenium, Cobalt, Dysprosium and Erbium; a Study of the Elastic Anisotropy-Phase Transformation RelationshipBy D. Dever, E. S. Fisher
Measurements of the temperature dependence of the elastic moduli in single crystals of hep ruthenium, rhenium, cobalt, dysprosium, and erbium were carried out for various temperature ranges so as to i
Jan 1, 1968
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French Post-war Mineral ResourcesBy AIME AIME
BECAUSE of its unequalled skill, your country in- creased its production until, in 1913, it produced 40 per cent. of the world's consumption of coal, iron ore, and cast iron; 45 per cent. of the
Jan 1, 1920
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Reservoir Rock Characteristics - The Instability of Slow, Immiscible, Viscous Liquid-Liquid Displ...By W. van der Knapp
A theoretical and experimental ana1ysis is given of the change in volume of a porous medium due to changes in external and internal pressures. The result enable one to deduce directly the effect of la
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New York Paper - Biographical Notice of John F. BlandyBy R. W. Raymond
The death of John Frederic Blandy, which occurred September 17, 1903, at Prescott, Arizona, terminated the earthly activity of one of the most active and able of the American mining engineers of the l
Jan 1, 1904
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Tariffs, Cartels, And The Mineral IndustryBy Willard L. Thorp
AFTER the first session which Secretary Marshall had with the Foreign Relations Committee, the members of the press asked what he had said His only comment, in summarizing his two-hour conference was,
Jan 1, 1947
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Magnesium - Plenty Available for Wide Variety of Potential Peacetime UsesBy T. W. Atkins
ATHOUGH the magnesium industry in this country is about thirty years old, not until American industry began to amaze the rest of the world and confound our enemies with the extent and variety of our w
Jan 1, 1946
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Field and Scope of the New Health and Safety CommitteeBy Scott Turner
OUR Institute, in its annual Directory, states the following: The purpose of each Technical Committee is to further the development of the special mineral industries in its field, chiefly through obt
Jan 1, 1933
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Reservoir Engineering – General - Two-Phase Flow of Volatile HydrocarbonsBy V. J. Kniazeff, S. A. Naville
The problem of unsteady-state condensate-gas flow through porous media leads to a set of second-order non-linear partial differential equations. Such a set of equations is numerically solved in the ca
Jan 1, 1966
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Mining Districts And Their Relation To Structural GeologyBy J. J. Beeson
Fox the past fifty years or more, the structural features of the Cordilleran mountain system of western United States have presented some most interesting problems. Any geologist or engineer living in
Jan 9, 1925
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The Control of Chill in Cast Iron. Considering the Elements Effective in the Manufacture of Malleable and Chilled Car WheelsBy Grafton M. Thrasher
Discussion of the paper of GRAFTON M. THRASHER, presented at the New York meeting, February, 1916, and printed in Bulletin No. 106, October, 1915, pp. 2129 to 2138. RICHARD MOLDENKE, Watchung, N. J.-
Jan 5, 1916
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Theory of Metallic Crystal AggregatesBy Charles Maier
IT has long been supposed that when crystalline materials are com-minuted the energy used in the production of increasingly smaller grain sizes is not entirely dissipated as heat but that a certain po
Jan 1, 1936
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Institute of Metals Division - The Observation of Dislocations and Other Imperfections by X-Ray Extinction ContrastBy J. B. Newkirk
ABOUT twenty-seven years ago W. bergl discovered that interesting detail could be seen in an X-ray diffraction spot made with a rock-salt crystal if the recording photographic film were held very clos
Jan 1, 1960
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Theory of Metallic Crystal Aggregates (e9bc371f-8933-4cae-b8d4-68c337415b03)By Charles Maier
PART I DENSITY AND ENERGY CHANGES IN COLD-WORKED COPPER IT has long been supposed that when crystalline materials are com-minuted the energy used in the production of increasingly smaller grain size
Jan 1, 1936
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The Future of the Lead and Zinc MarketsBy Clinton H. Crane
DR. TILNEY, the great expert on the study of the development of the brain of human beings and animals, tells us that the greatest difference between the human brain and the brain of animals is that ma
Jan 1, 1940
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Reservoir Engineering - General - Fosterton Field – An Unusual Problem of Bottom Water Coning and...By B. K. Larkin, H. R. Bailey
One of the most complicated and potentially one of the most promising secondary recovery methods is that of underground combustion. A number of field tests1,2,3 have been performed recently, appare
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Selection of Conveyors for Handling Hot Bulk MaterialsBy J. Walter Snavely
PRESENT-DAY processing in many industries, calcining, sintering, briquetting, beneficiation and nodulizing, increasingly calls for the handling of large volumes of hot bulk materials. Various types of
Jan 5, 1953
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Metallurgy of Ferroalloy Ores ? Many Processes Still War Secrets New Manganese and Nickel Plants Closed DownBy Jerome Strauss
IN his review of developments in 1943, Gilbert Seil, Chairman of this Committee on Reduction of the Ferroalloy Ores, tabulated the consumption of the alloying metals in relation to the steel productio
Jan 1, 1945
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Why the Metric System Should not be AdoptedBy W. R. Ingalls
THE propaganda in favor of the adoption of the metric system of weights and measures in the United States is founded upon the idea of compulsory adoption. There can be no argument about this, for the
Jan 1, 1921