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Mineral Industry vs. Ecology - A Balance Between Development And Environmental QualityPolluted air and water, despoiled land and excessive noise are the unwelcome results of the population growth and a rising standard of living. The consumption of goods and services, including metal pr
Jan 1, 1971
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The Health Hazards of Not Going NuclearBy Eugene Guccione
FOREWORD-In an interview published in the May 1975 issue of MINING ENGINEERING, one of the world's most respected scientists, nuclear physicist Hans Bethe discussed the reliability of nuclear pow
Jan 4, 1977
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Engineering Enrollment Report (b2a73e44-88d1-41c2-b265-9bab1d06ae16)By William B. Plank
Mineral engineering student enrollment in U. S. and Canadian schools for 1955-1956 is 11,408, an increase of 11 pct more than last year. The undergraduate and graduate engineering students in both cou
Apr 1, 1956
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Why Syngas From Coal?By James R. Garvey
Coal reserves of the United States are enormous. Considered on the basis of proven reserves, and compared with reserves of other fuels, coal constitutes 88% of the proven recoverable energy resources
Jan 6, 1972
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Mineral Industry Health And SafetyBy S. H. Ash
SAFETY records have improved in all branches of the mineral industry. While annual production was rising from $2 billion in 1910 to nearly $12 billion in 1950, fatalities decreased from 3539 in 1911 t
Jan 2, 1954
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Institute of Metals Division - Effect of Alloying Elements on the Electrical Resistivity of Aluminum AlloysBy A. T. Robinson, J. E. Dorn
The electrical resistivities of aluminum alloys containing CU, Ge, Zn, Ag, Cd, and Mg were found to increase linearly with the atomic percentage of the solute atoms. Application of Linde's rule t
Jan 1, 1952
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Iron and Steel Division - Hydrogen Reduction of a Low-Grade Siliceous Iron OreBy Franklin J. Hill, Theodore D. Tiemann
Sized fractions of Wisconsin Gogebic taconite were reduced with hydrogen over the temperature range from 600° to 1000°C. In general, the degree and rate of reduction increase with temperature. Particl
Jan 1, 1962
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Minerals Beneficiation - Flotation of Spodumene-Beryl Ores (MINING ENGINEERING. 1961. vol. 13 No. 7 p. 706)By J. S. Browning
The U.S. Bureau of Mines has been experimenting with flotation processes to separate the spodumene-beryl ores mined at Kings Mountain, N.C. The success to date as well as the present status of the pr
Jan 1, 1961
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PART III - Applications of Solid-Liquid Interdiffusion (SLID) Bonding in Integrated-Circuit FabricationBy H. Bartholomew, L. Bernstein
Experirmental bonds of Ag-In SLID to gold, copper, nickel, Kovar, Dumet, nickel-plated molybdenum, ALL-Pt vrzetallizing on ceramic, and nickel-plated Mo-Ti metallizing on Al2O3 ceramic have been made
Jan 1, 1967
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Institute of Metals Division - Lead-Uranium SystemBy R. J. Teitel
The Pb-U system has been investigated by X-ray, thermal, and microscopic analyses. Two pyrophoric intermetallic compounds were found; UPb3 and UPb. The crystallographic structure of UPb3 is reported.
Jan 1, 1953
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Mining - Deflection of Mine Roof SupportsBy L. Adler
Any design of a mine roof in bedded deposits which ignores differential deflections at the supports can quickly lead to dangerous overstressing. As illustrated by the typical case presented on page 10
Jan 1, 1960
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Virginia Beach Paper - Some Experiments for Determining the Refractoriness of Fire-Clays (see Discussion, p. 846)By H. O. Hoffman, C. D. Demond
There are two methods of determining the fusibility or refractoriness of fire-clays, the theoretical and the experimental. In the former, conclusions are drawn from the chemical composition; in the la
Jan 1, 1895
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Part V – May 1969 - Communications - A Computer Program for Calculating Interplanar Angles Of Hexagonal CrystalsBy R. K. Govila, E. H. Parkison
THE interplanar angles for hcp metals vary with c/a ratio, and therefore must be computed separately for each particular metal or alloy. Manual computation of these angles is laborious and time consum
Jan 1, 1970
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Use of Water-Only Cyclones as Clean Coal Scalpers Preceding Heavy Media CyclonesBy Milton F. Goodrich
The idea of using water-only cyclones to scalp clean coal from the feed to other devices has recently been gaining in popularity.l,2,6 An indication of this popularity is that water- only cyclone scal
Jan 10, 1978
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Biographical NoticesALEXANDER BRYDEN Alexander Bryden, clean of engineers in the anthracite mining field, and a member of the pioneer Pittston family, was claimed by death Wednesday, September 26, 1917. The announcement
Jan 12, 1917
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Production Control of Zinc as Viewed from the Tri-State DistrictBy P. B. Butler
IN common with others, the zinc industry found itself after the war largely over-capitalized, a condi-tion which still exists notwithstanding that Tri-State production has doubled since prewar days. T
Jan 4, 1928
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Discussion - Of Mr. Barrows' Paper on the Use of High Percentages of Mesabi Iron-Ores in Coke Blast-Furnace Practice (see p. 140)F. E. Bachman, Port Henry, N. T. (communication to the Secretary*):—In discussing Mr. o.o.Laudig's paper, the Action of Blast-Furnace Gases Upon Various Iron-Ores,' I took the ground that Me
Jan 1, 1905
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Papers - Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in the Texas Panhandle for the year 1940By H. W. McCue, Henry Rogatz
Oil.—In the Texas Panhandle, 502 oil wells were drilled during the year 1940, with a total daily initial production of 139,187 bb1.—that is, 137 more oil wells drilled than in the previous year, with
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in the Texas Panhandle for the year 1940By Henry Rogatz, H. W. McCue
Oil.—In the Texas Panhandle, 502 oil wells were drilled during the year 1940, with a total daily initial production of 139,187 bb1.—that is, 137 more oil wells drilled than in the previous year, with
Jan 1, 1941
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Face To Face Longwall Moves At Inland Steel Coal's Lancashire No. 25By D. N. Hedges
This paper discusses the actual recovery and installation of a longwall in a bituminous coal mine in western Pennsylvania. The coal bed mined is in the Lower Freeport seam, which averaged 1.07 m (42 i
Jan 1, 1985