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Lake Superior Paper - Report of a Committee to Co-Operate in Standardizing Abbreviations, Symbols, Punctuation, Etc., in Technical PapersTars Committee is the result of a desire of the authorities in charge of the publications of the four national engineering societies to co-operate in this matter. The members of the Committee are t
Jan 1, 1905
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Annual Business SessionBy AIME AIME
THE annual session for the election of officers and transaction of other official business of the Institute, which must be held, in accordance with the By-Laws, in New York on the third Tuesday in Feb
Jan 1, 1929
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The Significance Of Clay Mineralogy In The Amenability Of Sandstone Vanadium OresBy D. M. Hausen
The amenability of a given vanadium ore to any given treatment depends largely on the mineralogic combinations of vanadium in the ore. Quantitative data on vanadium mineralogy provide not only an obje
Jan 1, 1985
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The "Robbins'' Moles - Status And FutureBy Richard J. Robbins
Mechanical moles have developed through a tedious process of evolution. At times it has seemed that tunnel borers have been subject to the same Darwinian rules of evolution as their zoological namesak
Jan 1, 1970
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Lubrication of Mining Equipment - Part 3 - Compressors, Pumps, Fans, Screens, Wire Rope, Shovels and Draglines, Crushers, Air Tools, and TractorsBy Charles W. Frey
COMPRESSED air is one of the most useful tools that the mine operator has at his disposal. It is clean, nontoxic, easily handled, and can be distributed anywhere that a man can drag a length of rubber
Jan 1, 1938
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The Fuel-Efficiency of the Iron Blast-Furnace.By JOHN JERMAIN
In my opinion, the explanation of the fuel-requirements involving the conception of heat available and necessary above a critical temperature, as advanced by Johnson 1 and elaborated by Howe, Raymond
May 1, 1911
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Modern Practice of Ore-SamplingBy David W. Brunton
FROM the old-fashioned " grab-sample " to the modern timing- . device, which takes a machine-sample with mathematical precision, there is a wide gap which was only crossed' by many years of toil
Aug 1, 1909
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Modern Geophysical Methods in ProspectingBy Hans Lundberg
N OT so long ago, the discovery of an orebody took place only by accident. At the present time mineral deposits, even though concealed, may be revealed by their physical or geophysical characteristics
Jan 1, 1925
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Institute of Metals Has Full Two-Day ProgramBy TRUMAN S. FULLER
THE GREAT INTEREST in decomposition and trans- formation, so evident in the study of alloys during the last two years, was reflected in the many papers on this subject, presented at the first session
Jan 1, 1933
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Letters To The Editor - Principal Cobalt SourceMy bets are on you, every time! But who is right? In the "cobalt issue" of our favorite magazine, January 1951, you stated: "By far the best immediate United States prospect for, large amounts of coba
Jan 1, 1952
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Mining Geology (21c50fa4-fba2-4497-a520-398ba2ecc317)Succession of Minerals and Temperatures of Formation in Ore Deposits of Magmatic Affiliations BY WALDEMAR LINDGREN (Tech Pub 713 10,000 words ) The paper presents data accepted by many geochemists and
Jan 1, 1937
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Biographical notices: Alexander Burrell, August Raht, John A. ChurchALEXANDER BURRELL Alexander Burrell, general manager of the Furnace Creek Oxide Copper Mining Co., and' a member of the Institute for 20 years, died suddenly at the Argo mine on Feb. 13, 1917.
Jan 4, 1917
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Coking Properties Of Pittsburgh District CoalsBy D. E. Wolfson, D. A. Reynolds, F. W. Smith
IN 1948 the U. S. Bureau of Mines began a three- phase program to evaluate the extent and quality of U. S. coking coal: 1) a factual appraisal of known recoverable reserves in beds of mineable thickne
Jan 3, 1957
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Dispersing Properties Of Tanning Agents And Possibilities Of Their Use In Flotation Of Fine MineralsBy G. Rinelli, A. M. Marabini
A wide-ranging series of experiments has been carried out on value minerals (sphalerite, smithsonite and hematite) and gangue minerals (quartz and calcite) to assess the properties of various commerci
Jan 1, 1980
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United Engineering Societies LibraryBook Review MAN-TO-MAN: THE STORY OF INDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACY. By John Leitch, Phila¬delphia, Pa. The B. C. Forbes Publishing Co., New York, 1919, 2.19 pp., 7 1/2 X 5 in. $2.00. "Man to Man" is a short,
Jan 7, 1919
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Present Tendencies in Engineering MaterialsBy John A. Mathews
D R. CHARLES W. ELIOT, the great educator and philosopher-he of the five-foot book shelf-recently gave expression to a thought I had long been cherishing as a private opinion, when he said: "It is obv
Jan 1, 1926
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Silicon: Its Applications in Modern MetallurgyBy A. B. Kinzel
SILICON and its metallurgical uses have been the subject of speculation since the earliest days of modern civilization. The early philosophers, Theophrastus and Pliny, believed that silica was a speci
Jan 1, 1933
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Determination of Smelter Gas Volumes and Dust LossesBy V. E. Christensen
AT most smelting plants, forced draft, induced by high stacks or fans, is used to carry the gases away from the furnaces, roasters, or sintering plants. Gases moving under forced draft carry varying a
Jan 1, 1935
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Mr. Jackling Receives the John Fritz MedalBy John Fritz
TROUGH it is not a condition of the Award, the fact is that the John Fritz Medal never has been given to an engineer who had not already received one or more similar awards. This "medal for medalists,
Jan 1, 1933
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A Flux for Rolling Swill Cinder And Siliciou Iron Ores in the Blast FurnaceBy James P. Kimball
AMONG the curious results of the recent advance of prices in the iron trade of the United States, one of them at least is to be regarded as of great importance. I allude to the utilization of mill cin
Jan 1, 1881