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Operator Training And Start-Up - Grinding CircuitsBy Richard L. Seal, Allan L. Turner
INTRODUCTION The chapter discusses the procedures and operations starting with the actual training of operations personnel with respect to a grinding mill circuit and a typical check-out and start-
Jan 1, 1982
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Papers - - Produciton - Domestic- Oil and Gas in Michigan during 1934By Theron Wasson
Discoveries in Michigan, which at the beginning of the year 1934 indicated possible new areas, did not develop into fields of market-breaking proportions. Hart, Oceana County, developed small producti
Jan 1, 1935
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Managing for Ore DiscoveriesBy Paul A. Bailly
Around 4500 B.C., the Pharaoh of Egypt ordered a military campaign to the Sinai Peninsula and the shores of the Red Sea, to search for copper deposits which Egypt needed for jewelry, vases and weapons
Jan 6, 1979
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Physical Properties Of A 65-Cu, 10-Mn, 25-Zn AlloyBy J. R. Long, T. R. Graham
THIS report is concerned with part of a series of investigations carried on by the Federal Bureau of Mines on alloys, particularly nonferrous alloys, made with electrolytic manganese. A broad general
Jan 1, 1944
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Mining History At Cornwall, Pa.By Robert G. Peets
After 216 years, the end of operations at the Corn- wall mine can be foreseen within the next two decades. The story starts in 1732 when three sons of Wiliam Penn-John, Thomas, and Richard-deeded 96
Jan 7, 1957
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Solubility of Oxygen in Solid CopperBy F. N. Rhines
DESPITE the large amount of study which has been devoted to the subject our present knowledge of the copper-oxygen system remains incomplete and unsatisfactory in many respects. This applies particu-l
Jan 1, 1934
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Phosphate Rock (97a41283-0f24-47cf-ae46-d83b0288dc9b)By G. Donald Emigh
Nothing is more important to life-plant and animal-than phosphate. Its compounds are essential to the energy functions of all living systems and for the formation of bones and teeth. Animals get their
Jan 1, 1983
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Some Analytical Principles Concerning Oil Recovery By Forced DriveBy Stanley Herold
As an accompaniment to the interesting papers which discuss the practical aspects of forced drive, or flooding, in our oil fields, and to others which deal with laboratory or field tests on the same s
Jan 11, 1926
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Incentives for the Mining IndustryBy Donald B. Gillies
The fundamentals of human nature don't change much from generation to generation, or even from century to century. Except for the spur of necessity and the lure of reward and ad venture, few of u
Jan 5, 1950
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New York Paper - Grinding Brass Ashes in the Conical Ball MillBy R. W. Young, Arthur F. Taggart
The tests herein described are part of an extended series of expel<ments, performed by the authors together with J. F. McClelland and L. W. Bahney, on the reclamation of metallics from foundry and man
Jan 1, 1916
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Oil Developments In Canada During 1924By G. S. Hume
IN THE autumn of 1922, British Petroleums Ltd. found oil of 14° Baume in a sand 17 ft. thick in its No. 2 well at Wainwright, 120 miles southeast of Edmonton. This greatly encouraged drilling in the W
Jan 3, 1925
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Proceedings Of Meetings Held In 1935 - New York MeetingTHE 144th* meeting of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers was held in New York, Feb. 18 to 21, 1935. It consisted of the annual business meeting, 45 technical sessions at whic
Jan 1, 1936
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The Operation Of A Froth Flotation Pilot Plant On Washery-Water SolidsBy C. D. Rubert, W. J. Parton
LARGE quantities of fine anthracite with associated impurities are discharged with the waste water from the coal-cleaning plants in the Pennsylvania anthracite region. Furthermore, for many years this
Jan 1, 1944
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Mining MethodsBy C. H. Johnson
THE year 1952 has seen the continuance of the trend pointed out by Tell Ertl in this magazine a year ago, toward mechanization in metal and mineral mines. Outstanding progress has been made in the ado
Jan 2, 1953
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Geophysics ? Geophysical Oil Exploration in 1944 Nearly 30 Percent Ahead of 1943 Mineral Prospecting Likewise on IncreaseBy C. A. Heiland
IN the third year of war, geophysical oil exploration broke all records to keep pace with the demand for increased reserves. Geophysical prospecting for strategic and other minerals also grew in scope
Jan 1, 1945
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Petroleum Industry - ForewordBy H. F. Beardmore
PETROLEUM consumption during 1946 broke all previous records and further increases are expected during 1947. U. S. consumption amounted to an average of 5,280,000 bbl a day, of which 4,745,000 bbl was
Jan 1, 1947
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A New Theory of ComminutionBy Fred C., Fred C. Bond
Comminution energy is principally energy of deformation before breakage, which appears as heat. An empirical equation is presented which covers the entire comminution range. The new strain-energy theo
Jan 1, 1950
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Papers - - Production - Foreign - Russian Oil Industry in 1935By Basil B. Zavoico
The developments in the Russian oil industry during 1935 marked a very definite turning point from the time when the industry was being educated to the modern methods of oil-field finding and developm
Jan 1, 1936
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Canadian Paper - Helium, a National Asset (with Discussion)By Richard B. Moore
The successful commercial production of helium during the last few years has added greatly to its scientific interest. When the quantity of an element available for experimental purposes increases wit
Jan 1, 1923
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Mining Methods - Wire Saw as a Tool for Cutting Slate and Building Stone (T. P. 741, with discussion)By Oliver Bowles
When a new type of equipment revolutionizes methods of quarrying one kind of stone, producers of other kinds focus their attention on its potentialities in their particular fields. The purpose of this
Jan 1, 1938