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50. The Marysvale, Utah, Uranium Deposits
By Paul F. Kerr
The uranium-producing areas near Marysvale, Utah provide an unusual group of veins and replacement deposits associated with a Pliocene-Oligocene intrusive and extrusive igneous complex. Aside from sev
Jan 1, 1968
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Australian Coal Mining ? Plenty of Good Coal Available, Widely Distributed - No Oil Competition, But Climate Isn't Cold Enough
By Richard A. Hawkins
O the American coal man, Australian coal mining most appear to have little, if any, influence on American coal-mining practice and to bear little relation to it. Actually, the relationship has been cl
Jan 1, 1945
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Biographical Notices - David Talbot Day
Jan 1, 1925
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Bismuth (eeeee876-a123-45df-9a54-c7a982ed032d)
By Walter C, Smith
Metallic bismuth was known in the Middle Ages and the name is supposed to come from the German Wismut. The origin of the German name is uncertain. References to bismuth are found in the writings of Va
Jan 1, 1953
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Mineral Industry Education - American Colleges Are Not Only Turning Out Good Engineers But Good Citizens - Accrediting Completed
By Francis A. Thomson
IN reviewing mineral industry education a year ago, occasion was taken to congratulate the Institute in general and to felicitate the Education Di- vision in particular on "the most gratifying growth
Jan 1, 1940
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Progress Reported in Methods and Equipment: Shafts, Drilling, Explosives, Open-pit Haulage, Construction Materials, Mining, Tunnels, Backfilling, Ventilation, Research
By Bjorge, Guy N.
MINING method improve through the gradual process of evolution and in 1340 there were no marked outstanding innovations. On the other hand refinements of detail and betterment: in equipment design con
Jan 1, 1941
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Nonmetallic Inclusions
THE solid nonmetallic inclusions that are present to some extent in all commercial steels have been variously designated. In early references they were usually called slag inclusions, and. this termin
Jan 1, 1944
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More Steel for War
By Hiland G. Batcheller
HISTORY shows that the nation which makes the most steel is the most likely to win wars. Today the course of war shows that the nations which get there first with the most steel of the right kind will
Jan 1, 1943
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Influence of Chemical Composition on the Hot-working Properties and Surface Characteristics of Killed Steels
By Gilbert Soler
PRODUCERS of alloy steels recognize the importance of chemical composition in rela-tion to the hot-working properties and the typical surface defects found in their prod-uct. Each analysis of steel ha
Jan 1, 1940
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Institute of Metals Division - The Effective Atomic Radius of Silicon in Ternary Laves Phase Alloys
By D. I. Bardos, A. M. Bardos, Paul A. Beck
The approximate effective silicon radii in ternary Laves phase alloys with transition elements and silicon were found to range between 1.16 and 1.21A, i.e., considerably smaller than the atomic rad
Jan 1, 1963
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Institute of Metals Division - Constitution of Nickel-Rich Quaternary Alloys of the Ni-Cr-Ti-Al System
By A. Taylor
NICKEL-RICH alloys hardened with small additions of titanium and aluminum and centered around that region of face-centered-cubic primary solid solution, 7, where the atomic ratio of nickel chromium is
Jan 1, 1957
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Iron Ore Stacker at the Mesabi Chief Mine
By S. A. Mahon
AN interesting feature among the mining structures, on the Mesabi. iron range is the iron ore stacker erected in 1934 at the Mesabi Chief washing plant at Keewatin, Minn. It is built of structural ste
Jan 1, 1935
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Manganese-Ore In Unusual Form.
By William P. Blake
(Canal Zone Meeting, November, 1910.) A DEPOSIT of manganese-ore near Tucson, Ariz., merits notice by reason of the peculiar form in which it occurs, and as a striking. example of ore-deposition by v
Sep 1, 1910
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Magnetometric Survey of a Kimberlite Pipe in Southwestern Transvaal
By Krahmann, Rudolf
THE following is an account of a survey undertaken to test the possibility of outlining a kimberlite pipe by magnetouietric methods. Kimberlite is a basic igneous rock closely related to melilite-basa
Jan 1, 1935
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Nonmetallic Industrial Minerals ? Production Continues High to Meet Heavy Postwar Demands ? Several New Developments of Interest
By G. W. Josephson
VIRTUALLY every year inventors find one or more startling new uses for one of the varied products of the nonmetallic mineral industries. For example, in November a major step toward positive control o
Jan 1, 1947
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Chattanooga Paper - Quicksilver-Condensation at New Almaden
By Samuel B. Christy
The present paper is a continuation of a study of the reductionworks of New Almaden, the first part of which was published under the title " Quicksilver-Reduction at New Almaden," in the Transactions
Jan 1, 1886
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Steel for One More River - Army Engineers Produced "Meter Beams" to Bridge Rivers of Northern Europe
By Paul Queneau
FROM the first days on the Norman beaches to the last days on the Elbe the Army Engineers of World War II lived off the countryside for the great bulk of the construction supplies needed for the fulfi
Jan 1, 1946
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Institute of Metals Division - Tensile Properties of Zone Refined Iron in The Temperature Range from 298° to 4.Z°K
By R. L. Smith, J. L. Rutherford
ALTHOUGH considerable effort has been devoted toward the determination of the mechanical properties of pure metals, it is extremely difficult to compare the results of such work. This is because of di
Jan 1, 1958
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Characteristics And Origin Of The Brown Iron-Ores Of Camaguey And Moa, Cuba.
By Willard L. Cumings, Benjamin L. Miller
(Glen Summit Meeting, June, 1911.) I. THE CAMAGUEY DEPOSITS. 1. Location. THE Camaguey brown iron-ore deposit covers the top of San Felipe hill, the nearest point of which lies 14 miles NW. of th
Mar 1, 1911
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Geophysical Prospecting - Subaqueous Exploration Is Promising -Active Work in Canada - Many New Oil Fields Discovered
By Sherwin F. Kelly
MANY baffling problems of crustal geology-of warping and folding, elevation, subsidence, and great dislocations of the earth's surface-may now be on the verge of yielding to the science of geophy
Jan 1, 1938