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On The Feasibility Of Using A Radioactive Tracer Method And A Size-Discretized Mass Balance Model For The Measurement Of Growth Rates In MSMPR Crystallizers
By K. Verghese, R. W. Rousseau, R. P. Gardner
A radioactive tracer method and a size-discretized, mass balance model are formulated and demonstrated in a feasibility experiment for the determination of crystal growth rates in MSMPR crystallizers.
Jan 1, 1980
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On The Filtration of Water For Industrial Purposes
By P. Barnes
THE complete and accurate filtration of water (if the word ,accurate may be thus used) for the feeding of boilers, and for many similar industrial purposes, although somewhat practiced both at home an
Jan 1, 1882
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On the Hot Blast, With an Explanation of its Mode of Action in Iron Furnaces of Different Capacities
By I. Lowthian Bell
THERE has been probably no improvement introduced into the manufacture of iron which created more surprise in the minds of practical smelters and of scientific men than Neilson's discovery of the
Jan 1, 1877
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On the Importance of Surveying in Geology
By Benjamin Smith Lyman
THE importance of topography to geology is so commonly underrated as to deserve to be pointed out again and again. The relation of topography to the different branches of geology may be seen best by a
Jan 1, 1873
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On The Manufacture Of Artificial Fuel, At Port Richmond, Philadelphia.
By E. F. Loiseau
(Read at the Philadelphia Meeting, February, 1878.) UNTIL June, 1868, it had not been attempted, either in this country or abroad, to manufacture by mechanical means, from anthracite coal-dust, art
Jan 1, 1878
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On The Mechanism Of The Deposition Of Certain Metalliferous Lode Systems Associated With Granitic Batholiths
By W. H. Emmons
INTRODUCTION THE deposition of metalliferous lode systems takes place at considerable depths and no one may observe the process. We see only the end results of the process and from these we seek to
Jan 1, 1933
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On The Modeling Of Nuclear Waste Disposal By Rock Melting
By Francois E. Heuze
Today, the favored option for disposal of high-level nuclear wastes is their burial in mined caverns. As an alternative, the concept of deep disposal by rock melting (DRM) also has received some atten
Jan 1, 1982
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On the Natural Floatability of Molybdenite
By S. Chander, D. W. Fuerstenau
Hallimond tube flotation, contact angle measurements, electrokinetics, and electrode potential measurements have been used to investigate the natural floatability of molybdenite. The effect of surface
Jan 1, 1973
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On the Occurrence of Lustrous Coal With Native Silver in a Vein in Porphyry, in Ouray County, Colorado
By G. A. Koenig, Moritz Stockder
Locality and Geological Occurrence. The Alpine region of Southwest Colorado, comprising the San Juan and Uncompaghre Mountains, is composed of a deeply eroded sheet of acid eruptive rocks, overlying i
Jan 1, 1881
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On The Occurrence Of The Brown Hematite Deposits Of The Great Valley
By Frederick Prime
THE Great or Cumberland Valley, which (under a variety of names) extends from Canada, through Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, and East Tennessee, to Al
Jan 1, 1875
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On The Occurrence Of The Lead Ores In Missouri
By James R. Gage
THE lead deposits of Missouri may be divided into three districts, the southwest, middle, and southeast. As too much time would be required to devote a detailed account to each district, only a descri
Jan 1, 1875
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On the Origin of Certain Systems of Ore-bearing Fractures
By W. H. Emmons
IN 1922 Morey made a series of experiments in which he observed the cooling of a molten system containing H20, 9.1 per cent; K20, 17.3 per cent and Si02, 73.6 per cent. This system was confined in a b
Jan 1, 1934
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On The Percentage of Iron in Certain Ores
By Albert H. Chester
DURING the summer of 1875 I visited some of the iron mines of Houghton County, Mich., and was quite interested to observe the progress made there within a. few years. Working in open pits is gradually
Jan 1, 1876
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On The Performance Of Percussive Drills
By James J. Bailey
Percussive drills have been in commercial use for many decades. Until relatively recently there was little serious effort to analyze the stresses in such devices in any detail. Within the last few yea
Jan 1, 1968
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On the Probable Existence of Microscopic Dia¬monds, with Zircons and Topaz, in the Sands of Hydraulic Washings in California
By B. Prof. Silliman
THE occurrence of diamonds of some size in the gold-fields of California is by no means uncommon, and was noticed by me in a communication, to the California Academy of Science in 1867, when specimens
Jan 1, 1873
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On the Relation Between the Speed and Effectiveness of Stamps
By R. W. Raymond
THE question, what is the best proportion among weight, fall, and speed of stamps, is one which has not yet received thorough and systematic examination. In considering the economical application of s
Jan 1, 1873
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On The Requisite Quality Of Clay For Making Moulds For Casting In Bronze.
THERE are many kinds and varieties of earth* that are used for the loam compositions for making the moulds for casting bronze, brass, or other metals. Since this is a very necessary thing, you must tr
Jan 1, 1942
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On the Self-Fluxing Properties of Chateaugay Magnetite, From Clinton County, N. Y. and its Treatment in the Blast Furnace
By James P. Kimball
THE object of the present memoir is to put on record some practical experiments by the writer in smelting a silicious native magnetite with no other flux than the silicates of its own gangue: This wor
Jan 1, 1881
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On the Solution of Pig Iron and Steel for the Determination of Phosphorus
By N. H. Muhlenberg
IT is often a tedious matter to get a solution of pig iron or steel, for the determination of phosphorus, which is absolutely free from silica. Where pig iron rich in silicon is dissolved in hydrochlo
Jan 1, 1882
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On the Southern Limit of the Last Glacial Drift Across New Jersey, and the Adjacent Parts of New York and Pennsylvania
By George H. Cook
(Read at the Wilkes-Barre Meeting, May, 1877.) AT first sight this subject seems to belong to pure theoretical geology, but examination will soon show that it has important practical and economic i
Jan 1, 1878