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Papers - Health and Safety in Mines - Economic Aspects of Silicosis (Abstract).By B. F. Tillson
There is a dearth of information on the economic threat of silicosis. Even the insurance companies and rating bureaus are in a quandary, and the majority of them avoid any action that will stir up an
Jan 1, 1934
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Duluth Paper - The Incline Railway at Lookout MountainBy W. H. Adams
Among the engineering plants with new features and deserving details which are constantly being brought to the working stage in the Southern States by the generous expenditure of capital, none can exc
Jan 1, 1888
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Measures For Controlling Fires At The Copper Queen MineBy Gerald Sherman
MINE fires are always dangerous and are frequently accompanied by loss of life during the period of confusion which is apt to follow their discovery. In metal mines, fires may result from the accident
Jan 1, 1918
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Colorado Paper - Silver-Losses in CupellationBy L. D. Godshall
A great deal has been written of late regarding the loss of silver in assaying; very discordant results have been published by different writers, and much uncertainty exists concerning even approximat
Jan 1, 1897
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Skip System Simplifies Costly Problems of Elevating Ore From Open Pit MinesBy J. S. Seawright
Haulage is a costly feature in the operation of an open pit mine, whether it be iron, copper, or limestone. The National Iron Co. has adapted an old underground method to the open pit inclined skip ha
Jun 1, 1955
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Papers - New Flotation Reagents (T. P. 605)By R. S. Dean, A. B. Hersberger
Although it is obvious that in any flotation process we must have a froth, in recent years the development of collecting reagents has caused the possibilities of better frothing agents to be overlooke
Jan 1, 1939
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Mineral ResourcesBy Donald H. McLaughlin
THE primary function of the mining engineer is to find mineral deposits and fuels in the accessible rocks of the earth and to recover them for the vast needs of our complicated civilization. On him ha
Jan 2, 1953
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Minerals Beneficiation - A Statistical Experimental Design and Analysis of the Extraction of Silica from Quartz by Digestion in Sodium Hydroxide SolutionsBy S. M. Wu, R. L. Stone, T. D. Tiemann
The dissolution of silica from quartz in sodium hydroxide solutions was investigated by statistical methods. A second-order predicting equation was developed with 28 experiments expressing the dissolu
Jan 1, 1965
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Production - Domestic - Developments in the California Oil Industry during 1938By V. H. Wilhelm
In contrast with the previous year's activity, the California oil industry for 1938 showed a decrease in drilling, market demand, and discovery of new oil reserves, although there was an increase
Jan 1, 1939
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Papers - A Simple Method of Thermal Analysis Permitting Quantitative, Measurements of Specific and Latent Heats (T. P. 1100, with discussion)By Cyril Stanley Smith
The method of thermal analysis, so important in the development of metallographie science, has of recent years been falling into disuse owing to the development of other physical methods which give re
Jan 1, 1940
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Papers - Bismuth-Its Effect on the Hot-working and Cold-working Properties of Alpha and Alphabeta Brasses ( T.P. 1441, with discussion)By William B Price, Ralph W. Bailey
Arsenic, antimony and phosphorus are now used in the brass industry as standard inhibitors in preventing dezincification in condenser tubes. This subject has been thoroughly covered by Barry,l who
Jan 1, 1942
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Copper and Copper-Rich Alloys - Effect of Grain Size and Bar Diameter on Creep Rate of Copper at 200°C (Metals Technology, Feb. 1944) (With discussion)By E. R. Parker, C. F. Riisness
That grain size has a great effect on the mechanical properties of metals has been recognized for a long time. Bassett and Davis1 in 1919 did excellent work in determining the effect of grain size
Jan 1, 1944
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Mining Engineering Notebook – A Survey of Exploration DrillsFlexibility is the keynote in designing modern exploration drills that and mobility. Add to the flexibility of individual drills the wide range of models, and the man looking for a drill has ample cho
Oct 1, 1955
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On-Stream X- Ray AnalysisBy Harrison R. Cooper
The key to concentrator automation is practical means for obtaining continuous assay data from concentrator streams. The technique most successfully used is x-ray fluorescence analysis. The practical
Jan 1, 1976
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List of Members, Junior Members and Associates Geographically Arranged (db57c45a-4cae-485e-92d6-11fcb56e0502)ALABAMA Anniston.-Carrington, F. G. Auburn.-Brown, R. L. Bessemer.-Abbott, C. E. Dobbs, G. G. Ferguson, V. Salmon, H. S. Schaber, C. F. Birmingham.-Aldrich, T. H. Aldrich, T. H., Jr. Allen, A. W,
Jan 1, 1917
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The Oil Fields of PersiaBy Campbell Hunter
PETROLEUM is found in almost every province in Persia. On the northern frontier, along the southern shore of the Caspian Sea, it is found near Anzelli and Shakhtesar and gas at Khoremabad. Oil is also
Jan 2, 1920
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Production - Domestic - Developments in the California Oil Industry during 1938By V. H. Wilhelm
In contrast with the previous year's activity, the California oil industry for 1938 showed a decrease in drilling, market demand, and discovery of new oil reserves, although there was an increase
Jan 1, 1939
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Papers - Melting and Casting Metals - A Theory Concerning Gases in Refined Copper (With Discussion)By R. C. Dalzell, A. E. Wells
In 1866, Thomas Graham1 called attention to the volume of gases, three times the volume of the sample, evolved from a meteoric iron heated in an evacuated porcelain tube. From that time to this the oc
Jan 1, 1930
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New York Paper - The Garnet-Formations of the Chillagoe Copper-Field, North Queensland, Australia (Discussion, p. 974)By George Smith
ChillaQoe is situated in latitude 17" S., about 138 miles from the port of Cairns, with which it is now connected by rail. A township has been established on the banks of Chillagoe creek, a perennial
Jan 1, 1904
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Physical Characteristics of Gold Lost in TailingsBy R. E. Head
UNDER existing economic conditions, the treatment of gold ores occupies an outstanding position in metallurgical activity. The increased price of gold has automatically brought about a reclassificatio
Jan 1, 1936