Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
-
Safe Transportation of Men on Mine SlopesBy W. B. HILLHOUSE
AN excerpt from the Alabama State Mining Law, pertaining to, transporting men' into and out of the mines, reads as follows: "A trip of empty cars may be operated for the purpose of taking employ
Jan 1, 1935
-
Mining Gilsonite in UtahBy RUSSELL C. FLEMING
GILSONITE is a brilliant black, tarry-like bitumen, classed technically with glance pitch and graharnite as an asphaltite. As found it is brittle, breaking much like ice, and has a conchoidal fracture
Jan 1, 1932
-
Special Evaluation Problems in MiningBy Dr. O’Neil Thomas J., Donald W. Gentry
"If you can hold a board of cross directors In happiness against their gauzy schemes; If you can dodge the wrath of the electors Till dividends will flow as in their dreams; If you can make a mine pay
Jan 1, 1984
-
Central Ohio Coal Company's Mine Expansion ProgramBy Paul D. Martinka
Coal is the principal energy source for the American Electric Power System (AEP System), which generates and delivers more electric energy to its customers within a seven-state area than any other inv
Jan 1, 1969
-
Case Against a Copper TariffBy AIME AIME
THAT the copper industry is in serious straits is admitted. So are the lead and zinc industries, and both lead and zinc are tariff protected. Conditions in the Western lead, zinc and silver mining dis
Jan 1, 1932
-
Tintic Mining District (61a046e6-ba1f-476a-9d29-d784b65b268a)"With a total value to date of well over $200,000,000.00 for its ore production, the Tintic mining district, which is about 100 miles southwest of Salt Lake City, ranks as one of the three main ore pr
Jan 1, 1925
-
Papers - Strain Transformation in Metastable Beta Copper-zinc and Beta Copper-tin Alloys (With Discussion)By Alden B. Greninger, Victor G. Mooradian
Microscopic examinations of quenched (beta) 60:40 copper-zinc and quenched (beta) 74:26 copper-tin alloys have frequently disclosed long, thin parallel bands or markings within the polyhedral beta gra
Jan 1, 1938
-
Papers - Strain Transformation in Metastable Beta Copper-zinc and Beta Copper-tin Alloys (With Discussion)By Alden B. Greninger, Victor G. Mooradian
Microscopic examinations of quenched (beta) 60:40 copper-zinc and quenched (beta) 74:26 copper-tin alloys have frequently disclosed long, thin parallel bands or markings within the polyhedral beta gra
Jan 1, 1938
-
Louis S. Cates And The Company's ExpansionBy Robert Glass Cleland
DURING the closing month of 1929, Walter Douglas found his health impaired by the strain of many difficult years of alternating prosperity and depression, and in April 1930 resigned the presidency of
Jan 1, 1952
-
St. Louis Paper - The Zinc Ores of the Joplin District (with Discussion)By W. Geo. Waring
The winning of zinc and lead ores from the comparatively shallow deposits of the Joplin district presents few such problems for the mining engineer as are encountered in deep ore mining and in the han
Jan 1, 1918
-
Diamond Drilling with Surfactants in Upper Michigan Amygdaloidal Basalts Using Surface-Set BitsBy Harold F. Unger, Byron S. Snowden, William H. Engelmann
The effects of using surfactant solutions while diamond drilling in amygdaloidal basalt of the Upper Michigan copper mining district were investigated. Nonionic, anionic, and cationic surfactant solut
Jan 1, 1976
-
Petroleum Developments in Argentina, 1943-1945By ALFREDO INTZAUGARAT, MIGUEL BERRO
During the years 1943 through 1945, there was a decrease in the total oil production in Argentina. In the fields of Comodoro Rivadavia (Chubut Territory) and Mendoza and Salta Provinces, the productio
Jan 1, 1946
-
Garsdorf Lignite Strip Mine-Operations To Unusual DepthsBy E. H. Erwin Gartner
The Rhenish lignite deposit in the Nordrhein-Westphalia province of the German Federal Republic covers an area on the left bank of the Rhine River of about 970 sq miles (Fig. 1). Here, in the Miocene
Jan 1, 1969
-
Queen Nine-Hearth RoasterBy J. Moore Samuel
THE prospective change in ore receipts at the Copper Queen reduction works necessitated a careful study of conditions to determine the most economical method of smelting. The first step, calculating t
Jan 7, 1921
-
Part X – October 1969 - Papers - On the Possible Influence of Stacking Fault Energy on the Creep of Pure Bcc MetalsBy R. R. Vandervoort
The creep behavior of Nb(Cb), Ta, Mo, and W was determined under conditions of constant atomic dif-fzisivity, constant stress to elastic modulus ratio, and nearly equivalent grain size, and the steady
Jan 1, 1970
-
Institute of Metals Division - Free Energy of Formation of Cementite and the Solubility of Cementite in AusteniteBy R. W. Gurry, L. S. Darken
The solubility of cementite in austenite is computed by thermodynamic methods from the observed solubility of graphite. It is found that the solubility of cementite is greater than that of graphite in
Jan 1, 1952
-
Nitrates And Nitrogenous CompoundsBy Horace R. Graham
CHEMICAL nitrogen and the "nitrates" of commercial significance are derived mainly from three basic sources: (1) the natural deposits in the form of nitrate-bearing earth and clay, which, being largel
Jan 1, 1949
-
Institute of Metals Division - Autocatalytic Acid Corrosion of Aluminum Containing CopperBy O. P. Arora, M. Metzger
Single-phase aluminum containing 1 to 600ppm copper was studied in 7 to 26 pct HCl. The corrosion rate in the autocatalytic stage was resolved into a constant intrinsic component and an acdelerating
Jan 1, 1963
-
Papers - Quicksilver Deposits near Little Missouri River, Southwest Arkansas (With Discussion)By J. C. Reed, J. M. Hansell
Cinnabar was discovered in southwestern Arkansas on Little Missouri River in sec. 1, T.7S., R.26W., in April, 1930, and near Antoine Creek in sec. 28, T.6S., R.23W., some 15 miles farther east in May
Jan 1, 1935
-
Papers - Quicksilver Deposits near Little Missouri River, Southwest Arkansas (With Discussion)By J. C. Reed, J. M. Hansell
Cinnabar was discovered in southwestern Arkansas on Little Missouri River in sec. 1, T.7S., R.26W., in April, 1930, and near Antoine Creek in sec. 28, T.6S., R.23W., some 15 miles farther east in May
Jan 1, 1935