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Concerning Quicksilver And Its Ore.QUICKSILVER is a body that consists of flowing and liquid materials, almost like water with a shining whiteness; it is composed by Nature of a viscous, subtle substance with an overflowing abundance o
Jan 1, 1942
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New York Paper - An Example of the Alteration of Fire-Brick by Furnace GasesBy Frank Firmstone
The furnace from which the brick here referred to were taken, was lined under my supervision and blown-in in May, 1902. It was 75 ft. high and 18 ft. in greatest diameter, and used coke to smelt a lea
Jan 1, 1904
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Oxidation of Aqueous Sulfur Dioxide (f740e221-5dee-4d99-bef3-86fb86b0987a)By J. B. Hiskey, W. J. Schlitt, W. G. Pitt
Aqueous SO2 (sulfurous acid) is an interesting chemical compound. It functions as a reagent in various hydrometallurgical systems, but also represents an undesirable constituent in gyro- and hydrometa
Jan 1, 1984
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Oxygen And Sulphur In The Melting Of Copper CathodesBy Stanislaus Skowronski
THE melting of cathode copper, usually containing 99.98+ per cent. Cu, would appear to be a simple matter. Owing to the well known affinity of copper for sulphur, however, so much sulphur is absorbed
Jan 3, 1918
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High-Efficiency Desliming By Use Of Hydraulic Water Additions To The Liquid-Solid CycloneBy D. A. Dahlstrom
THE necessity for slime elimination from valuable mineral and coal products has become increasingly significant within the past 5 years.1,2 Most of the mechanized mining and present beneficiation meth
Jan 1, 1952
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Tracing a Basic Dike, Near Chapel Hill, N. C. by Geoelectrical and Geomagnetic MethodsBy W. R. Johnson
In the spring of 1935 the writers undertook to compare the geomagnetic and direct-current earth-resistivity methods of tracing a concealed dike along its strike. As far as they are aware no such direc
Jan 1, 1937
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Magnesium Chloride From Naturally Occurring Brines and EvaporitesBy A. F. Nylander, J. H. Jensen
Magnesium, in its combined forms, is the sixth most abundant element and the third most abundant metal in the earth's crust, but it is so reactive that it is never found in nature in the elementa
Jan 11, 1964
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The Law of Fatigue and Refreshment of Metals*By T. Egleston
FOR several years I have been engaged in studying the behavior of iron' and steel under varying conditions of tension and compression, as well as of shock and abrasion. Some of these observations
Jan 1, 1880
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New York Paper - Vacuum-Fused Iron with Special Reference to Effect of Silicon (with Discussion)By T. D. Yensen
It is safe to say that of all the different materials that go to make up electrical machinery, iron is the most important. Upon its magnetic and electrical quality depends not only the efficiency of t
Jan 1, 1916
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Part I – January 1968 - Communications - The Variation of Ingot Structure with CompositionBy G. S. Coe, G. F. Bolling
The columnar-to-equiaxed transition (CET) has often been studied as a function of concentration, C, temperature gradient in the melt, G, and rate of solidification, R. Although it may not be immediat
Jan 1, 1969
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Production Engineering and Research - Role of Connate Water in Secondary Recovery of Oil (T.P. 1608, Petr. Tech., July 1943).By Robert B. Bossler, Parke A. Dickey
The presence of connate water in oil sands is of far greater practical significance in secondary oil-recovery operations than it is in primary operations. The percentage saturations of oil, water, and
Jan 1, 1944
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Production Engineering and Research - Role of Connate Water in Secondary Recovery of Oil (T.P. 1608, Petr. Tech., July 1943).By Parke A. Dickey, Robert B. Bossler
The presence of connate water in oil sands is of far greater practical significance in secondary oil-recovery operations than it is in primary operations. The percentage saturations of oil, water, and
Jan 1, 1944
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History of the Hecla Mine Burke, IdahoBy JAS. F. McCARTHY
THE present Hecla Co. is a Washington corporation; the Hecla Co. of Idaho was the old company. The older corporation owned two claims, the Hecla and the Katie May, and was incorporated for 500,000 sha
Jan 1, 1924
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Papers - Manufacture and Properties of Bessemer Steel (With Discussion)By C. C. Henning
In any line of human activity logical handling requires an amount of attention to each phase that is in keeping with the importance of that phase. In the complex and rapidly changing field of modern f
Jan 1, 1935
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Papers - Manufacture and Properties of Bessemer Steel (With Discussion)By C. C. Henning
In any line of human activity logical handling requires an amount of attention to each phase that is in keeping with the importance of that phase. In the complex and rapidly changing field of modern f
Jan 1, 1935
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Manufacture And Properties Of Bessemer SteelBy C. C. Henning
IN any line of human activity logical handling requires an amount of attention to each phase that is in keeping with the importance of that phase. In the complex and rapidly changing field of modern f
Jan 1, 1935
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New York Paper - Gasoline from “Synthetic” Crude Oil (with Discussion)By Walter O. Snelling
In the course of some experiments more than five years ago, made for a totally different purpose than the investigation of the oil used, I placed a small quantity of a transparent yellow lubricating o
Jan 1, 1915
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The Treatment Of Zinc Plant Residue At The Risdon Works Of The Electrolytic Zinc Company Of Australasia Limited.By C. J. Haigh
Stockpiled and currently produced zinc plant residues containing zinc ferrite are to be treated at a rate of 350 tonne per day in a plant that is being constructed at the Risdon works of the Electroly
Jan 1, 1970
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Birmingham Paper - Ducktown, Tennessee, Copper DistrictBy Wilbur A. Nelson
All of our accounts say that the discovery of copper ore at Duck-town, Tenn., was made in August, 1843, yet it would appear that samples of copper from this district were found by DeSoto, when he wand
Jan 1, 1925
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Phosphate Fertilizers by Calcination Process-Volatilization of Fluorine from Phosphate Rock at High TemperaturesBy K. D. Jacob
ALL types of commercial phosphate rock produced throughout the world contain fluorine in quantities ranging from approximately 0.4 to 1.3 per cent in the Curacao and Christmas Island phosphates to 3.1
Jan 1, 1936