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IC 6709 Mining Methods And Costs At Granada Gold Mines (Ltd.), Rouyn, Quebec ? IntroductionBy R. L. Loofbourow
The adjacent towns of Rouyn and Noranda, centers of the Rouyn mining district of western Quebec, are 360 miles by air line almost duo north of Toronto. Rouyn is reached from the main lines of the Cana
Jan 1, 1933
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RI 4799 A Survey On The Hydraulic Transportation Of CoalBy R. W. Dougherty
From time to time interest has been evidenced in transporting coal with water in pipe lines. About the year 1895, United States patents broadly covering a method of pumping coal with water through pip
Jan 1, 1951
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OFR-144-77 In-Situ Stress Field At The Pea Ridge MineBy R. Agarwal
The in-situ stress field was determined, using the overcoring technique, at two underground sites at the Pea Ridge Mine, Sullivan, Missouri. At one of the sites in magnetite, the three dimensional str
Jan 1, 1977
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IC 8910 Thermodynamic Properties Of Selected Transition Metal Sulfates And Their HydratesBy Carroll W. DeKock
Thermodynamic data for selected metal sulfates were critically evaluated and compiled as part of the Bureau of Mines program to provide a scientific base for use in developing new technology and predi
Jan 1, 1982
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RI 8162 An Evaluation of Emergency Inflatable Stoppings for Use in Metal Mine Fire Rescue and Recovery OperationsBy Edward D. Thimons
Inflatable stoppings are currently marketed for production use, and numerous mining companies have become interested in using such stoppings in rescue and recovery operations. The Bureau of Mines ther
Jan 1, 1976
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IC 6268 The Granite Industry Dimension Stone - Occurrence And Character Of GraniteBy Oliver Bowles
Granites are classed as igneous rooks; they have been formed by the solidification of rook magmas or Solutions from deep within the earth. It is an almost invariable law of nature that mamas which coo
Jan 1, 1930
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RI 8136 Oil and Gas Seeps in Alaska - North-Central Gulf of AlaskaBy Donald P. Blasko
The Bureau of Mines investigated two areas of oil and gas seeps in the north-central Gulf of Alaska--Katalla River to Bering River and Cape Yakataga to Yakutat Bay to determine (1) whether previously
Jan 1, 1976
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RI 6811 Thermal Phenomena During Ignition Of A Heated Dust DispersionBy John Nagy
The Bureau of Mines adapted thermal theories explaining combustion of gases to correlate parameters affecting ignition of dust dispersions. The dust dispersions were ignited in a Godbert-Greenwald fur
Jan 1, 1966
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RI 9396 - Copper Exchange Capacity of Clays and Their Potential Effect on In Situ Copper LeachingBy S. P. Sandoval, A. E. Clark, S. W. Yopps, J. S. Gomer
The U.S. Bureau of Mines conducted Cu exchange tests for six common clays under simulated in situ leaching conditions. Regression equations were obtained from the data expressing the Cu exchange capac
Jan 1, 1992
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Behavior of Dust Clouds in Mine AirwaysBy R. V. Ramani, R. Bhaskar
"The control of respirable dust in mines has been given paramount importance due to the health and safety implications associated with fine dust. The understanding of the temporal and spatial behavior
Jun 1, 1988
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Mica BeneficiationBy James S. Browning
For the past several years, the Bureau of Mines has conducted laboratory and continuous process development work on weathered mica pegmatites and micaceous schist ores to determine the feasibility of
Jan 1, 1973
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RI 6447 Preparation of Titanium NitrideBy T. A. Henrie, E. K. Kleespies
Carbon reduction of rutile and ilmenite in nitrogen and ammonia atmospheres was studied as a method of preparing titanium nitride . Ammonia was a better nitriding agent than nitrogen . The contact bet
Jan 1, 1964
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IC 9130 Helium Resources Of The United States, 1985By Richard D. Miller
The helium resources base of the United States was estimated by the Bureau of Mines to be 1,070 Bcf as of January 1, 1985. These resources are divided into four categories in decreasing degree of assu
Jan 1, 1987
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RI 4418 Investigation Of Potato Mountain Tin Placer Deposits Seward Peninsula, Northwestern AlaskaBy Harold E. Heide
Although the United States has been the largest consumer of tin, only a small quantity of tin was produced or. the North American Continent during peace times, and thy deficiency was made UP by foreig
Jan 1, 1949
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RI 9012 - High-Purity, Fine-Particle Boron Nitride Powder Synthesis at -75degrees to 750degrees CBy Rustu S. Kalyoncu
Nonoxide ceramics with improved high-temperature properties could substitute for high-temperature alloys and reduce toe Nation's dependence on imports of Cr, Co, Ni, and Mn. To meet this objectiv
Jan 1, 1986
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RI 5189 Galvanic Corrosion Properties Of Titanium In Organic Acids ? SummaryBy David Schlain
The galvanic corrosion properties of titanium in contact with commercially pure aluminum, copper, or type 302 stainless steel in some of the common organic acids were investigated. Acids used in these
Jan 1, 1956
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RI 5611 Leonardite: A Lignite Byproduct ? Summary And ConclusionsBy Walter W. Fowkes
Leonardite is a coallike substance, similar in structure and composition to lignitic coal and believed to be derived from lignitic coal by the process of natural oxidation. Leonardite is little known
Jan 1, 1960
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RI 9347 - Method for Recovering Anhydrous ZnCI2 From Aqueous SolutionsBy B. R. Eichbaum
To develop technology to assure an ample supply of zinc and to reduce environmental pollution, the U.S. Bureau of Mines investigated alternatives to the roast-leach process for treating complex sulfid
Jan 1, 1991
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RI 6531 Specific-Gravity to Oil-Yield Relationships for Black Shales of Kentucky's New Albany FormationBy John Ward Smith, Neil B. Young
Shale specific - gravity to oil - yield relationships were developed for black shales of the New Albany Formation of Kentucky from data collected on core samples representing the complete section of t
Jan 1, 1964
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RI 2776 Hydrogen Sulphide Poisoning In the Texas Panhandle, Big Lake, Texas, And McCamey, Texas OilfieldsBy W. P. Yant, H. C. Fowler
"INTRODUCTIONHydrogen sulphide is probably the most toxic gas associated with crude oil. Hydrocarbon (petroleum) vapors themselves are harmful to the human system, but hydrogen sulphide, when present,
Oct 1, 1926