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                Managing The Wealth Of United States MineralsBy David C. Russell
The Department of the Interior used to be a quiet, noncontroversial, almost boring agency. It, after all is the fifth oldest of the Departments, and as an old line Federal agency it has studiously per
Jan 1, 1982
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                Eugene McAuliffe, President, A.I.M.E., 1942By AIME AIME
EUGENE McAULIFFE will be the fifty-ninth man elected President of the Institute. Looking back to the first President, David Thomas, and reading Dr. Raymond eulogy of him, written eleven years after li
Jan 1, 1941
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                New York Paper - Overstrain in MetalsBy Joseph Kaye Wood
A metal is said to be overstrained when it is deformed beyond the elastic limit at a temperature well below the critical range, as in cold working. Quantitatively, overstrain might be considered as th
Jan 1, 1924
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                Effect of Freight Rates on Marketing Northwest lndustrial MineralsBy Leslie C. Richards
The competitive position of producers of industrial minerals depends upon the delivered price of their product. Freight charges are a major factor in the sales to consumers. A comparison of freight ra
Jan 1, 1950
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                Papers - Copper, Brass and Bronze - Comparative Properties of Oxygen-free High Conductivity, Phosphorized and Tough-pitch Coppers (With Discussion)By J. L. Christie, W. R. Webster, R. S. Pratt
Since the delivery of our paper on Some Comparative Properties of Tough-pitch and Phosphorized Copper,1 a new brand known as "oxygen-free high-conductivity copper" (brand OFHC) has become available to
Jan 1, 1933
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                Institute of Metals Division - Mechanism for the Origin of Recrystallization NucleiBy J. P. Nielsen
When two grains in a polycrystalline specimen meet at a point in the course of grain-boundary movements, and the new boundary created at the point is one of relatively low specific free energy, a none
Jan 1, 1955
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                New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute October, 1890 Paper - The Iron-Ores of Virginia and their DevelopmentBy Edmund C. Pechin
THE writer approaches this subject with a great deal of diffidence —first, because it is utterly impossible to treat it satisfactorily within the limits of a paper, and, secondly, because the larger d
Jan 1, 1891
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                New Haven Paper - The Development of the Modern By-Product Coke-OvenBy Christopher G. Atwater
The object of this paper is to describe and discuss the progress that has been made, up to the present date, in the development of the modern by-product coke-oven. There are few members of the Institu
Jan 1, 1903
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                How to Speak Effectively in PublicBy A. Ross Rornmel
ABILITY to speak effectively is one of man's most longed for and coveted abilities. It is the ability to stand on one's feet, transfer knowledge and thoughts to others, to reach an objective
Jan 1, 1946
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                Institute of Metals Division - The Free Energy Change Accompanying the Martensite Transformation in SteelsBy J. C. Fisher
Martensite transformations in steels and other alloys are characterized in part by the absence of composition changes during the growth of a new phase. Transformation occurs rapidly, and there is insu
Jan 1, 1950
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                Drilling-Equipment, Methods and Materials - Energy Balance in Rock DrillingBy R. Simon
The sources of energy dissipation for concentrated loadings on rock are considered in an attempt to account for the experimentally measured magnitude of the work required to break out a unit volume of
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                New York Paper - Shock Tests of Cast Steel (with Discussion)By John H. Hall
The Frémont test for measuring the energy consumed in breaking a notched bar of steel is not so well known in this country as it deserves to be. The test specimen used in this test is about # by 6 by
Jan 1, 1914
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                The Outlook For Australia's Resource Industry And Its Funding NeedsBy Nicholas J. Palethorpe
BACKGROUND Before addressing the above topic in any detail, it is pertinent to provide some background on Australia for those people who have not been there or who have a limited knowledge of our c
Jan 1, 1982
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                Part III - Papers - Vapor-Phase Growth of GaAs1-xPx Room-Temperature Injection LasersBy I. J. Hegyi, J. J. Tietjen, H. Nelson, J. I. Pankove
The fabrication of p-n junctions in GaAsl-,P, alloys by a vapor-phase gowth technique has for the first tirne resulted in room-temperature injection lasers capable of operating over a broad range of w
Jan 1, 1968
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                Arizona Paper - The Composition of the Rock Gas of the Cripple Creek Mining District, Colorado (with Discussion)By Alfred W. Gauger, George A. Burrell
The senior author of this paper, while in Colorado on other official business, made a trip to the Cripple Creek gold-mining district to get more data than are at present available regarding the compos
Jan 1, 1917
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                Minerals Beneficiation in 1949By S. J. Swainson
"It appears to me that the chief progress in milling operations in America have been made in the steady improvement of existing practice through both higher extractions and increased efficiencies of o
Jan 1, 1950
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                St. Louis Paper - Oil Fields of Russia (with Discussion)By T. G. Madgwick, A. Beeby Thompson
FoR more than 2500 years, natural gas issues in the Surakhany district of the Apsheron peninsula were the object of pilgrimages by fire worshippere and Hindoos from Burma and India. Even as late as 18
Jan 1, 1921
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                Processing and CarbonizationBy A. C. Fieldner
DURING 1939, 286 by-product coke ovens were completed and put into operation. These included 140 Witputte ovens for the Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corp., at Gary, Ind.; 61 Koppers-Becker ovens for the Fo
Jan 1, 1941
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                Institute of Metals Division - A Preliminary Investigation of the Zirconium-Beryllium System by Powder Metallurgy MethodsBy H. H. Hausner, H. S. Kalish
IN recent years zirconium and beryllium have become of great interest because of their special properties. Zirconium is known for its remarkable ability to absorb the gases oxygen, nitrogen and hydrog
Jan 1, 1951
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                Cleveland Paper - New Type of Blast-Furnace ConstructionBy J. E. Johnson
The general construction of blast-furnaces has undergone no radical change in more than a generation. When the old style of masonry construction was replaced by the steel shell, the masonry piers were
Jan 1, 1913