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Ultrasonic Measurement Of Mine Roof Bolt Strain (c8005b9a-29ca-4eb8-a88f-02c739052124)By B. J. Steblay
Roof bolts are the primary means of supplemental support in coal mines and are widely used in other mines. Presently, post installation loads are measured infrequently on only about 10% of the bolts b
Jan 1, 1986
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The Replacement of Sulphides by QuartzBy H. N. Wolcott
AMONG the many cases of replacement of one mineral by another, that of quartz or silicates by pyrite, or even other sulphides, is not uncommon, but the reverse of this process does not appear to have
Jan 6, 1917
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Some Characteristics Of Roll-Type Uranium Deposits At Gas Hills, WyomingBy John W. King, S. Ralph Austin
Spurred by recent forecasts of greatly increased demands for uranium by 1980 and beyond, interest is once again focusing on America's western uranium deposits. One of the principal producers in t
Jan 5, 1966
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Skip System Simplifies Costly Problems of Elevating Ore From Open Pit MinesBy J. S. Seawright
Haulage is a costly feature in the operation of an open pit mine, whether it be iron, copper, or limestone. The National Iron Co. has adapted an old underground method to the open pit inclined skip ha
Jun 1, 1955
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Technical Notes - Filler Material for the Brazing of TitaniumBy N. A. DeCecco, H. M. Meyer
IN the early stages of a titanium brazing investigation, binary titanium systems partially or completely known and fundamental metallurgical data were surveyed to select the pure metal most likely to
Jan 1, 1954
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Basic And Applied Aspects Of Pelletizing Of Fine ParticlesBy K. V. S. Sastry, M. Cross
A summary of recent progress in understanding the main factors affecting the pelletization of fine particles is presented. A scheme for categorizing the mechanisms responsible for pellet growth is out
Jan 1, 1980
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Institute of Metals Division - Oxidation of Columbium MonoxideBy W. T. Hicks
The oxidation of CbO was studied by a gravimetric technique from 400° to 1200°C in oxygen. In this temperature range the oxidatiotz is characterized by an irlductive period of low oxidation rate, whic
Jan 1, 1962
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Cone-Type Precipitators For Improved Copper RecoveryBy J. D. Prater, H. R. Spedden, E. E. Malouf
Application of research findings to the old art of leaching copper from copper-bearing mine waste has resulted in a significant contribution of copper to over-all copper production. For example, at th
Jan 4, 1966
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General Principles of Chemistry As Applied to MineralsBy William E. Ford, Edward Salisbury Dana
447. Minerals, as regards their chemical constitution, are either the uncombined elements in %native state, or definite compounds of these elements formed in accordance with chemical laws. It is the o
Jan 1, 1922
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Scranton Paper - Comparison of Some Southern Cokes and Iron-OresBy A. S. M’Creath, E. V. d’Invilliers
The rapid development of the southern coal and iron-ore fields during the past few years, and especially in the latter half of the year 1886, and the avidity with which everything relating to the indu
Jan 1, 1887
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Pittsburgh Paper - The Process Used at the Comstock for Refining Coppery Bullion Produced by Amalgamating TailingsBy A. D. Hodges
The process to be described, whatever other merits (or demerits) it may have possessed, certainly proved a financial success under the conditions of the locality where it was introduced and where a re
Jan 1, 1886
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Petrologic Methods for Application to Solid Fuels of the FutureBy James M. Schopf
Coal petrology is the study of the lithologic composition and texture of coal and includes megascopic as well as microscopic differentiation. Coal petrography is a quantitative study, principally (but
Jun 1, 1956
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Institute of Metals Division - The Surface Tension of Liquid Chromium and ManganeseBy Benjamin C. Allen
The surface tensions of liquid chromium and manganese were determined by a modification of the dynamic drop-weight method and found to be, respectively, 1700 * 50 and 1100 * 50 dynes per cm at their m
Jan 1, 1964
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What Should Be The Long-Range R&D Mission For The Minerals Industries? - A Look To 1980-And BeyondResearch and Development, once considered a luxury item only for well-heeled companies, has in the last two decades come into its own as a vital contributor to the fortunes of electronic, automotive,
Jan 1, 1968
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Iron and Steel Division - Low Manganese Steels For Nuclear ApplicationsBy H. F. Beeghly
UNTIL recently the only criteria by which steels were judged were their cost and their mechanical, chemical, and physical properties. The user was concerned with such properties as corrosion resistanc
Jan 1, 1957
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Safety Engineering At Alabama Coal MinesBy Lawrence Henderson
TO increase tonnage in the early days of coal mining it was necessary only to hire more men. The job now is to increase the tons per man, but other troubles arise because this has been accomplished. W
Jan 8, 1957
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Block Caving Practice At The Jeffrey MineBLOCK CAVING HAS BEEN DEVELOPED to a high degree of efficiency in the last two decades and more particularly since World War II. At the Jeffrey mine of Canadian Johns-Manville Co., in the Eastern Town
Jan 5, 1954
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Copper EmbrittlementBy L. L. Wyman
SINCE the observations of Heyn,1 relative to the embrittlement of copper after having been heated in hydrogen, this subject has received considerable attention from later investigators. The published
Jan 1, 1931
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Book IVBy Herbert Clark Hoover, Lou Henry Hoover
THE third book has explained the various and manifold varieties of veins and stringers. This fourth book will deal with mining areas and the method of delimiting them, and will then pass on to the off
Jan 1, 1950
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El Salvador Development & OperationFor more than 100 years, the Republic of Chile has been one of the leading copper-producing countries of the world. Between 1877 and 1880 Chile accounted for over 50 pet of total world copper producti
Jan 4, 1960