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Progress in Combatting Silicosis - A Summary of the Recent Geneva ConferenceBy R. R. Sayers
SILICOSIS is a term known to almost everyone today. Yet, in spite of a great deal of study, much is still to be learned regarding the disease. Government organizations are still continuing their inves
Jan 1, 1939
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Discussion - Of Mr. Campbell's Paper on the Influence of Carbon, Phosphorus, Manganese and Sulphur on the Tensile Strength of Open-Hearth Steel (see p. 772)A discussion of the paper by Mr. Campbell, which was read by title at the Lake Superior meeting, but first presented at the New York meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute, October, 1904 (see p. 772)
Jan 1, 1905
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Anaconda's Test and Production Finger DumpBy William J. Robinson
What is the cumulative rate of recovery of copper from a sulfide leach dump? The technical answers to this frequently asked question may vary from "I don't know" to "quite good" from people of th
Jan 1, 1974
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Importance And Application Of Piezoelectric MineralsBy Hugh H. Waesche
OF all the military services, the Signal Corps is the most concerned with piezoelectric minerals because of its function as a supply service to the strategic and tactical military forces. Consequently
Jan 1, 1949
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Longhorn Tin SmelterBy Charles B. Henderson
DESPITE the loss, by enemy conquest, of a high percentage of our normal sources of supply for tin, the position of this important metal is easier today than that of rubber and a long list of other str
Jan 1, 1943
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Iron Ores on the West Coast of ChileBy Joseph Daniels
IN connection with a study of the feasibility of establishing a blast-furnace industry in the Puget Sound region of Washington, possible sources of ore supplies along the Pacific rim were investigated
Jan 1, 1926
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The Tunnels of the Hudson Companies.*By D. V. BURR
THE ORIGINAL HUDSON RIVER TUNNEL. NOT quite forty years ago a man of uncommon character entered New York. He had several hundred thousand dollars earned by railroad building in the Nest. He was not a
Mar 1, 1908
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Present Conditions Of Mining In The District Of Vladivostok, Siberia.By Albert F. J. Bordeaux
(Cleveland Meeting, October, 1912.) THE immediate vicinity of the sea-shore, affording special facility for the exportation of ores, makes it possible to work certain mines in the Vladivostok distric
Oct 1, 1912
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A Simple Rotary Distributor for Blast-Furnace ChargesBy David Baker
IN a paper presented to the American Institute of Mining Engineers, September, 1904, entitled ? Improvements in the Mechanical Charging of the Modern Blast-Furnace,"' I showed the great fault of
Jul 1, 1906
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Our National Resources And Our Federal Government.By R. W. Raymond
(Cleveland Meeting, October, 1912.) UNDER the names of Conservation, Social Justice, the New Nationalism, and Progressive Democracy, many earnest reformers are calling for a new system of Federal gov
Oct 1, 1912
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Engineers Necessary for Continued American Industrial ProgressBy Donald B. Gillies
WE HAVE come a long way since the time of the old steel master who declared that chemistry would ultimately bring the steel business to ruin. Yet I sometimes doubt whether even now we fully recognize
Jan 1, 1940
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The Design of Underground Excavations (1bbb18a1-ed73-457f-8650-77e4fdc0f104)By N. G. W., Cook
When an excavation is made underground the original rock stresses are removed from the surfaces of the excavation. These surfaces converge to partially close the excavation and the superincumbent rock
Jan 1, 1969
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Caving and Drawing at ClimaxBy F. S., Mc Nicholas
A practical discussion of the theory of A block caving is presented which applies particularly to the physical conditions of the Climax orebody although the conditions are sufficiently characteristic
Jan 1, 1950
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Problems In Mechanization In Primitive CountriesBy James V. Thompson
ENGINEERS from industrialized countries are frequently called upon to examine mining operations in primitive areas and make recommendations regarding mechanization and modernization. They often set fo
Jan 8, 1958
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Automatic Control of Open-hearth FurnacesBy W. TRINKS
RAPID progress has been made in the automatic control of open-hearth furnaces in the past few years and many firms today\supply such control apparatus. It is somewhat surprising that so little was hea
Jan 1, 1931
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Outcrop Coal - Its Removal and Dangers in Pitch MiningBy Joseph Kelly
DEPLETION of anthracite resources in Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania, has forced the recovery of coal tracts formerly considered unminable. Chief among these are the large areas of outcrop coal lying
Jan 1, 1936
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The Haciendas of the Cerro de Pasco Copper CorporationBy B. T., Colley
AS always when metallurgical operations are conducted within or close to agricultural and stock-raising regions, the question of damage due to fume and smoke presented itself when the Cerro de Pasco C
Jan 1, 1945
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Development and Use of Some A.S.T.M. Copper SpecificationsBy AIME AIME
IN ACCORDANCE with the provisions of the Rules of Procedure of the American Engineering Standards Committee, the American Society for Testing, Mate-. on Feb. 15, 1921, submitted for approval by the A.
Jan 1, 1921
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Miscellaneous AnnouncementsThe Board of Directors has authorized the following offers of sets of back volumes of the Transactions, at considerably reduced prices, to Members, Libraries, and Scientific Societies Per Set. I. Fi
Jan 4, 1913
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Thickening - Art Or Science?By E. J. Roberts
Prior to 1916, thickening was an art, and any accurate decision as to what size of machine to install to handle a given tonnage of a specific ore must have been one of those intuitive conclusions, bas
Jan 1, 1949