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Height of Gas Cap in Safety Lamp- Discussion (7ab99b87-b70d-4ca9-b950-01430fb6c9ba)
JAMES ASHWORTH, Livingstone, Alberta, Can. (written discussion*).-About the year 1878, the writer commenced to experiment on safety lamps, the results of which will be found in the Transactions of the
Jan 12, 1919
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Pittsburg Paper - The Invention of the Bessemer Process (Presidential Address at Pittsburgh)
By Joseph D. Weeks
NOTE BY THE SECRETARY.—This address having been made the object of much hostile comment, arising, as Mr. Weeks believed, in large part from misunderstanding of its purpose and meaning, was, by his exp
Jan 1, 1897
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Production - Foreign - Petroleum and Gas in Iran during 1938
Masjid-i-Su1aiman.—There have been no new developments in the Masjid-i-Sulaiman oil fields during the year 1938. In spite of the age of this field, the fall in dome pressure shows no appreciable varia
Jan 1, 1939
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Minerals Beneficiation - New Method for Recovery of Flake Mica
By R. Adair, W. R. Hudspeth, W. T. McDaniel
ANEW method for concentrating the flake mica either from present washing plant tailings or from new feed has been developed. In this paper, flake mica refers to that which occurs in weathered granites
Jan 1, 1952
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Geothermal Heat Shows Possible Use in the Fiji Islands
By J. N. Munro
At the present stage of geothermal technology and the still limited applications of geothermal energy, most of us consider any use of "things geothermal" to be something out of the ordinary. If in suc
Jan 9, 1964
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Washington Paper - Hydraulic Pumping-Plant on the Snake River, Idaho, for Power, Irrigation and the Treatment, of Gold Sands
By John Birkinbine
The following data, collected during a visit to the Snake river district, in Idaho, arc offered as indicating the possible utilization of a water-fall for irrigation by pumping, the working of gold-pl
Jan 1, 1901
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Fundamental Laws Of Pyrometry
By C. E. Mendenhall
THE word temperature has both a colloquial and a technical use. For everyday purposes of abusing the weather man, no very exact definition is necessary, but for the purpose of giving a simple summary
Jan 9, 1919
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Drilling - Equipment, Methods and Materials - Dynamic Filtration During Microbit Drilling
By F. S. Young, K. E. Gray
Drilling tests with a 11/4-in. diameter roller bit were performed on Berea and Bandera sandstones and Leuders limestone using water and two conventional drilling muds as circulating fluids to evaluate
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Pittsburg Paper - Electric Mine-Hoists
By D. B. Rushmore, K. A. Pauly
Of primary importance in mine-installations is the hoist, which has a very direct bearing on the successful operation of a mine. Conditions vary greatly with different mines, and especially in differe
Jan 1, 1911
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - The Preparation and Properties of Barium, Barium Telluride, and Barium Selenide
By Irving Cadoff, Kurt Komarek, Edward Miller
Barium can be purified by equilibration with titanium. The melting point of barium was found to be 726.2° i 0.5 °C. The room-temperature lattice parameters of BaTe and Bask are 7.004 * 0.002A and 6.60
Jan 1, 1961
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Student Prize Paper Awards
Starting in 1940, national prize-paper contests for Student Associates and members of Student Chapters of the Institute have been conducted by a Sub- committee of the Committee on Student Relations Fi
Jan 1, 1952
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Coal - Some Aspects of Mechanical Coal Cleaning in Utah - Discussion
By Carl S. Westerberg
1,. C. McCABE*-—An increased derliand for coal in the west is to be expected because of the growth in population and industry during the past ten years. The author calls attention to the increased mec
Jan 1, 1950
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Optimum Rate of Working Mineral Deposits
By Norman D. Fitz, Gerald
BOTH physical and economic factors are concerned in determining the optimum rate of depletion of a mineral deposit. The physical limitations are, in a large measure fixed by nature. Economic influence
Jan 1, 1938
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Institute of Metals Division - Some Applications of the Thermodynamic Theory of Irreversible Processes to Physical Metallurgy
By E. S. Machlin
An extension of the thermodynamic theory has been made for the case of irreversible growth processes occurring by the motion of an interface. The theory is applicable to such diverse phenomena as diff
Jan 1, 1954
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Milling-A Career Of Multiple Choices
By Norman Weiss
There was a time in the early history of man's use of metals when ore could be directly reduced to usable form by the use of fire. In those days the term "milling," or its many synonyms signifyin
Jan 1, 1970
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Scratch And Brinell Hardness Of Severely Cold-Rolled Metals
By M. F. Fogler
An attempt to duplicate Rawdon and Mutchler's experiments showing a reversal of hardness with continued rolling gave negative results, indicating that the phenomenon is not general but depends, p
Jan 1, 1925
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Choosing Ore Feeders For Beneficiation Plants
By O. W. Walvoord
A Definition: An ore feeder is a mechanical device that, by virtue of its motion, causes ore to be supplied or carried forward at a desired metered rate to other milling equipment. From the vi
Jan 2, 1955
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The Probability Theory of Wet Ball Milling and Its Application
By Elliott J. Roberts
The theory is developed that the tons ground through a given mesh per day in a wet ball mill is proportional to the percent plus that mesh in contact with the balls and the net power applied to the ba
Jan 12, 1950
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Additional List Of Members Of The Institute In Military Service
(The following list contains the names of those members of the Institute of whose connection with military service we have only recently become acquainted; it also includes the names of a few who have
Jan 10, 1918
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New York - Philadelphia Paper - The Mineral Crest, or the Hydrostatic Level Attained by the Ore-Depositing Solutions, in Certain Mining Districts of the Great Salt Lake Basin (Discussion, p. 1060)
By Walter P. Jenney
In the limestone area of Tintic and other mining districts of the Great Basin region of Utah, it has been observed that surface-outcrops of ore occur but seldom, and are mainly confilled to points of
Jan 1, 1903