Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
-
What is the Matter with Modern Galvanizing?By J. A. Singmaster
A REPORT that it did not pay to use present-day galvanized iron on account of the short life of the material, accompanied by proofs of the state-ment in the form of a tabulated history of the first co
Jan 10, 1922
-
Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Developments in New York for 1938By C. A. Hartnagel, D. H. Newland
The market for Pennsylvania grade showed a drop both in demand and in prices, which reacted unfavorably on New York oil production, all of which comes under that classification. The output for the yea
Jan 1, 1939
-
Papers - - Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in the Texas Panhandle for the year 1935By T. C. Craig
During the year, there were 570 oil wells completed for a total daily initial production of 365,352 bbl. The daily oil potential of the field, effective Jan. 1, 1935, as established by the Texas Railr
Jan 1, 1936
-
Papers - - Estimation of Petroleum Reserves - Acre-foot Yields of Texas Gulf Coast Oil FieldsBy Alexander Deussen
The figures listed in a table for Gulf Coast fields given by L. P. Teas1 in 1934 are so greatly at variance with results that I have obtained from a serious study of this subject over a number of year
Jan 1, 1936
-
Production - Foreign - Oil and Gas Production in PolandBy Eugene Jablonski
Statistical data on the Polish producing business are available only for the first half of 1939. Because of the invasion of the country during September by Germany and Russia all sources of informatio
Jan 1, 1940
-
New York Paper - Use of Cripples in Industry (with Discussion)By James P. Munroe
Appalling as has been the loss of life in the last 51 months, there is one slight compensation: no longer will there be in the world a cripple, in the old meaning of the term. Men handicapped by wound
Jan 1, 1919
-
Conservation of Iron OreBy C. K. Leith
QUOTING from Dr. Richard T. Ely:1 "Conservation, narrowly and strictly considered, means the preservation in unimpaired efficiency of the resources of the earth; or in a condition so nearly unimpaire
Jan 2, 1916
-
Pittsburgh Paper - The Sampling of Cast-Iron BoringsBy Porter W. Shimer
As is well known, cast-iron borings are a mixture of small particles of iron with more or less of finely divided graphite, separated from thc surfaces of these small particles during the process of bo
Jan 1, 1886
-
Preparation of Industrial Minerals - The Recovery of Pyrite from Coal Mine Refuse (Abstract) (Mining Tech., July 1944, T.P. 1744; TRANS AIME (1944) 157, 141By David K. Mitchell
The mineral pyrite (or marcasite) occurs in coal beds as balls, lenses, veinlets and bands. Several million tons are w-asted annually on the refuse dumps from coal mining and coal-preparation activiti
Jan 1, 1948
-
Reservoir Engineering-Laboratory Research - Dead-End Pore Volume and Dispersion in Porous Media; DiscussionBy J. E. Warren
In their analysis of Eqs. 29 and 30, the authors correctly deduce the following behavior limits for the "differential capacitance model". 1. When the rate group a is sufficiently large, the model r
Jan 1, 1965
-
Institute of Metals Division - Solubility of Oxygen in Liquid Nickel and Fe-Ni AlloysBy J. Chipman, H. A. Wriedt
DURING the past twenty years, a considerable background of knowledge has been built up on the chemical behavior of oxygen in liquid iron. Little is known regarding oxygen in liquid nickel or the effec
Jan 1, 1956
-
Slot System of Mining at Golden Queen Mine, Mojave, CaliforniaBy Charles Kumke
THE "slot" system of mining in use at the Golden Queen mine, Mojave, Calif., does not involve any new mining methods. It is, how-ever, a, new combination and adaptation of several stoping systems in c
Jan 1, 1937
-
Part IX – September 1968 - Communications - Discussion of "On the Mechanism of the Martensite-to-Austenite Reverse Transformation in an Fe-Ni Alloy" *By S. Shapiro, G. Krauss
We will reply to Dr. Pitsch's discussion by 1) presenting in greater detail the single surface trace analysis which we performed on the reversed austenite plates in a single parent plate of marte
Jan 1, 1969
-
Discussion - Uniform Mining Law for North America Discussion of the paper of T. E. Godson, continued from page 706R. B. BRinsmade, Ixmiquilpan, Hgo., Mexico (written discussion").—how far ahead of the United States are the self-governing British colonies in their application of economic democracy is well illustra
Jan 1, 1920
-
Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Developments in New York for 1938By C. A. Hartnagel, D. H. Newland
The market for Pennsylvania grade showed a drop both in demand and in prices, which reacted unfavorably on New York oil production, all of which comes under that classification. The output for the yea
Jan 1, 1939
-
The Hecla Flotation PlantBy W. L. Zeigler
THE tailing from the gravity concentration plant of the Hecla Mining Co., Gem, Idaho, was former-ly loaded into railroad cars to be used for ballast, highway surfacing material, or concrete work, or d
Jan 8, 1927
-
Classification And Preparation Of Non-Ferrous Scrap Metals And AlloysBy H. F. Seifert
THE classification and preparation of non-ferrous scrap metals is a subject of interest to every individual and corporation that employs in its processes of manufacture non-ferrous metals and alloys a
Jan 1, 1928
-
The Advantages Of High-Lime Slags In The Smelting Of Lead OresBy S. E. Bretherton
(San Francisco Meeting, September, 1915) DURING the year 1878-79, Anton Eilers, who was then interested in the lead smelting and refining business near Salt Lake City, Utah, made a somewhat radical d
Jan 8, 1915
-
Papers - - Estimation of Petroleum Reserves - Acre-foot Yields of Texas Gulf Coast Oil FieldsBy Alexander Deussen
The figures listed in a table for Gulf Coast fields given by L. P. Teas1 in 1934 are so greatly at variance with results that I have obtained from a serious study of this subject over a number of year
Jan 1, 1936
-
How Iron Balls Are To Be Made By Casting, For Shooting With Large And Small Guns.IN order not to deviate from the proposed order both in speaking of melts and of things necessary for guns, I shall tell you at present the method by which iron balls are made. This is surely a very f
Jan 1, 1942