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Production Engineering and Research - A Series of Enthalpy-entropy Charts for Natural Gases (T. P. 1747,By G. G. Brown
Enthalpy-entropy diagrams are presented for natural gases of 0.6, 0.7, 0.8, 0.9, and 1.0 gravity over the pressure range of 5 to 10,000 Ib. per sq. in. and temperature range of 32º to 700°F. The chart
Jan 1, 1945
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How to Use the Engineering Societies LibraryBy Ralph H. Phelps
WHAT information do you have on precision investment casting? Please send me all available information on the removal of paraffin from oil wells and pipe lines. How can I find out how to remove magnes
Jan 1, 1948
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Engineers in American LifeBy L. W. WALLACE
IN an engineering fashion we have made an assay of the engineering profession, using as a. sample the engineers listed in "Who's Who in America" (1928-1929). We are aware that some will say it is
Jan 1, 1929
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Experiments on the Cause of Bubble Attachment in FlotationBy Orson Cutler Shepard
RECENT research work in the flotation concentration of minerals has been concerned mainly with flotation reagents and the mechanism by which collecting reagents are held to the surface of certain mine
Jan 1, 1936
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Ferroalloying Materials ? Demand Heavy for Most Products Though Not Equal to WartimeBy R. M. Briney
A RETURN to nonwar conditions characterized the year 1946. The acquisition and forced use, under Government auspices, of low-grade and uneconomic ores, both foreign and domestic, ceased in 1945, but t
Jan 1, 1947
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Professional EthicsBy John Hays Hammond
Discussion of the paper of John Hays Hammond, presented at the Chattanooga meeting, October, 1908, and published in Bi.-Monthly Bulletin., No. 24, November, 1908, pp. 1171 to 117S. PROF. HENRY Louis,
Jun 1, 1909
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Atlanta, Ga Paper - Discussion of Mr. Furman's paper on the Assay of Silver Sulphides (see p. 245)Albert Arents, Alameda, Cal.: From Mr. Furman's description of his crucible-assays I infer that he regards iron nails as a necessary or advisable adjunct. Against such a notion I must beg leave t
Jan 1, 1896
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Anaconda's Dump Leaching Flows Smoothly with FRP Pipe SystemExtremes in temperature and weather, along with the highly corrosive nature of acid leach solutions used at open-pit copper mines, necessitates the use of pipeline systems that are both corrosion resi
Jan 6, 1976
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Part IV – April 1969 - Papers - Tensile Ductility of Steel Studied with UltrasonicsBy W. F. Chiao
With the application of dislocation damping theory an attempt was made to determine whether the generation and extension of dislocations is inherently more difficult in a brittle steel than in a ducti
Jan 1, 1970
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New Cornelia MillCRUSHING and concentration flow-sheets of western mills have become greatly simplified and more or less standardized of recent years with the introduction of modern grinding methods and flotation. Imp
Jan 1, 1930
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Magnesium-Its Sources, Methods of Reduction, and Commercial ApplicationBy Paul D. V. Manning
MAGNESIUM is an exceedingly strategic material but the importance of its production at the time this war started was not realized. Our Government then suddenly became much alive to the need of a treme
Jan 1, 1943
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Early History of the Mine La Motte AreaBy AIME
THE history of the Mine La Motte area covers a greater period of time than any other mining operation west of the Mississippi, for it was almost exactly four centuries ago that the white man first vis
Jan 1, 1947
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Progressive Zinc IndustryBy W. M. Peirce
FOR many years it was considered quite the proper introduction to any discussion of zinc metallurgy to remark that the methods of extracting zinc from its ores were archaic. Often there was an added i
Jan 1, 1931
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Dutch Mining Engineer Thinks Mineral Stock-Piling No Guarantee of a Better WorldBy AIME AIME
IN an address before the New York Section. A.I.M.E., Oct. 20, Alex L. ter Braake, speaking on the tin industry of the Netherlands East Indies, interjected a few remarks, at the chairman's request
Jan 1, 1943
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Past and Future Education of EngineersBy C. E. MacQuigg
BY and large the education of the engineer has been conservative and the reasons for this are obvious. Quite properly it has been a tradition of engineering education that facts and not fancies must b
Jan 1, 1943
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The Argonaut Mine of TodayBy Wesley G. Josephson
THE MINING PROPERTY of the Argonaut Mining Co., Jackson, Calif., is one of the oldest on the Mother Lode. A vein outcropping on a hill in this section could not long elude the eye of the forty-niner,
Jan 1, 1932
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Interest Rapidly Increasing in Eastern Magnetite Mining and MillingBy Arthur T. Ward
WHEN the Board of Directors of the Institute in June 1931 approved the formation of the Committee on Eastern Magnetite and its then membership of eleven, little did any of those concerned envision tha
Jan 1, 1943
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Institute of Metals Division MeetingBy AIME AIME
THE Institute of Metals Division of this Institute held a joint meeting with the American Foundry- men's Association on Oct. 5-9, at Syracuse, N. Y. The registration at this meeting was about 150
Jan 1, 1925
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Protection Against Corrosion the Topic at ClevelandBy AIME AIME
0 N March 5, at Carnegie Hall, Cleveland, the Ohio Section held a joint meeting with the Cleveland Engineering Society, and the local sections of the American Chemical Society, American Society of Mec
Jan 1, 1929
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The Petroleum Industry?ForewordBy Eugene A. Stephenson
NUMBER of noteworthy events in the petroleum industry may be reported for 1941, of which the most spectacular was doubtless the rise in the daily rate of crude-oil production to a peak of approximatel
Jan 1, 1942