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Chlorides in Oil-Field WatersBy C. W. Washburne
THE waters of many oil fields have been regarded as buried sea water which has been retained in the sediments since the time of their deposition. The preservation of connate water through geological t
Jan 3, 1914
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Conveyor Operation In Michigan WildernessBy F. B. Speaker
MUCH of White Pine's success is due to the mechanization of mining operations and the development of an efficient beneficiation process to extract usable copper from the low-grade ore (averaging
Jan 12, 1957
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Chlorides in Oil-field WatersReply to discussion of the paper of C. W. Washburne, presented at the New York meeting, February, 1914 (Trans., xlviii, 687 to 694 (1914)). C. W. WASHBURNE, New York, N. Y. (communication to the Sec
Jan 4, 1915
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Discussions included in Volume 184C. W. MERRILL*—Mr. Hughes' paper not only is very well presented but is most timely in that it covers a subject of vital interest to the United States. Tin is one of the strategic metals which ha
Jan 1, 1950
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Chemical Control in Copper ReductionBy AIME AIME
A MODERN copper reduction works has both a genera1 chemical laboratory for control work and a research laboratory for the study of improvement of present processes and better working-up of by-products
Jan 1, 1929
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Radon Emanometry In Uranium ExplorationBy N. M. Saum, W. T. Caneer
Uranium may be in short supply due to the predicted energy needs in the coming years. As a result of this, a new surge of uranium exploration is underway accompanied by the refinement of numerous expl
Jan 5, 1974
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Drilling Practice In Swedish MiningBy Ingvar Janelid
DURING the last ten years, in the effort to save manpower and costs, methods of drilling and blasting in Sweden have changed and developed in a revolutionary manner. These developments have been accom
Jan 6, 1954
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Special Evaluation Problems in MiningBy Dr. O’Neil Thomas J., Donald W. Gentry
"If you can hold a board of cross directors In happiness against their gauzy schemes; If you can dodge the wrath of the electors Till dividends will flow as in their dreams; If you can make a mine pay
Jan 1, 1984
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Difficulties Met in Differential FlotationBy Carl Lemke
SOME of the principal metallurgical difficulties en-countered in the differential flotation of lead-zinc-iron sulfide ores arise from the following causes: The oxidized, or partly-oxidized, condition
Jan 4, 1927
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Stable Transformation Nuclei In SolidsBy John N. Hobstetter
IT is widely believed that the nucleation of phase transformations in solid metals is accomplished by some type of local atomic fluctuations in the parent phase which arise from spontaneous diffusion
Jan 1, 1948
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Directed Stress in Copper CrystalsBy C. H. Mathewson
COPPER and the copper-base solid solutions readily form twin crystals when plastically deformed at a suitably elevated temperature or annealed after cold deformation. In fact, no feature of the micros
Jan 1, 1930
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A.I.M.E. Papers Published In 1940All the TECHNICAL PUBLICATIONS and CONTRIBUTIONS published in 1940 are available at Institute headquarters, unless otherwise noted. They are also on file in many public, university and technical libra
Jan 1, 1940
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Organic Sulfur Compounds In CoalBy J. Jolly
THIS short note on the probable character of the organic sulfur compounds in coal can do no more than indicate lines of research. We have no new experimental work to describe, nothing comparable in va
Jan 3, 1925
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Filtration in Uranium Mill CircuitsBy Colin MacDonald
The choices of an uranium mill flowsheet are pri- marily determined by economic feasibility with plant location and regulatory bodies playing a lesser but still important role in this determination.
Jan 1, 1980
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Nickel Deposits In The UralsBy H. W. Turner
THE axis of the middle portion of the Ural mountains is made up chiefly of highly compressed igneous and sedimentary schists, considered of Devonian age by the Russian geologists, with large areas of
Jan 2, 1914
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Errors in Underground Air MeasurementsBy Stefan Boshkov, Malcolm T. Wane
The validity and accuracy of velocity measurements underground have been questioned repeatedly by those in mine ventilation work. The general disagreement on the subject is well illustrated in an AIME
Nov 1, 1955
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Talc And Soapstone In WashingtonBy Hewitt Wilson
IN 1903, T. M. and E. H. Alvord, of Marblemount, Wash., built a soapstone-grinding mill in the Skagit River Valley and are reported to have produced "ground talc" during 1904 and 1905, shipping to the
Jan 1, 1936
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Non-Ferrous Metals in RussiaBy AIME AIME
THE non-ferrous 'metals industry of the Soviet Union found itself in a very low position at the beginning of the reconstruction period in 1922, due to the absence of modern smelters and the run-d
Jan 1, 1929
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Dredging for Gold in AlaskaBy J. C. Boswell, J. D. Crawford
IN addition to its base-metal and coal mining operations, the United States Smelting Refining and Mining Company has, for the past quarter century, been one of the few large American mining companies
Jan 1, 1948
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Load Reduction in Systematic SupportsBy Lawrence Adler
For openings in bedded rocks, analyzed by simple beam theory, it has been shown that roof loads can be shifted from one support to another.' This transfer is effected by controlling the relative
Jan 5, 1960