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Vol. LIX
Vol. LIX will be shipped during December to all Members whose 1918 clues are paid on or before Nov. 15.
Jan 12, 1918
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Volatility Of Constituents Of Brass
J. W. RICHARDS*(South Bethlehem; Pa.).-The brass industry would find it very profitable to subsidize researches on the purely scientific determination of the thermophysical properties of the brasses.
Jan 1, 1919
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Volatilization in Assaying
By Frederic Dewey
IT IS common to blame irregular assay results upon volatilization and much has been written upon the subject, but there is no. real evidence that, in a properly conducted assay, the loss of either gol
Jan 2, 1920
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Volatilization Of Cuprous Chloride On Melting Copper, Containing Chlorine
By S. Skowronski
PURPOSE OF INVESTIGATION Since cuprous chloride melts at 418° C., boils at 954° C. to 1033° C.,1 and is known to be volatile at a much lower temperature, the presence of chlorine in any form in or on
Jan 2, 1919
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Volcanic Waters.
By John B. Hastings
THE origin of the watery vapors of vulcanism has always been an object of interest and speculation to the seismologist, and as theories of the genetic origin of ore-deposits have of late years been pr
Jan 5, 1908
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Volcanogenic Nickel Deposits with Some Guides for Exploration
By A. J. Naldrett, N. T. Arndt
In Archean greenstone belts, ultramafic lavas occur interbanded with basalts, commonly at the base of volcanic-sedimentary cycles. The lavas form part of a recently recognized extrusive rock series, t
Jan 1, 1977
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Volume 233 – Number 3 – Foreword – Jules J. Duga
Jan 1, 1965
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