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Carbon-In-Pulp - Recovery Of Gold And SilverThe ability of activated charcoal or carbon to adsorb complex metal ions has been recognized for many years, but it wasn't until the late 1940s and early 1950s that attempts were made to employ c
Jan 1, 1981
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Recycling Milling Water In Missouri's New Lead BeltBy Franklin H. Sharp, Kenneth L. Clifford
During the last few years the New Lead Belt of Southeastern Missouri has become the main source of lead in the United States. It also produces significant amounts of zinc, copper and silver. The mines
Jan 7, 1973
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Technical Notes - Solid Solubility of Calciurn in MagnesiumBy E. C. Burke
IN view of rather widespread use of calcium as an alloying addition to magnesium alloys, it is rather surprising to find that, although the general features of the Mg-Ca equilibrium diagram are known
Jan 1, 1956
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Market Trends For Mineral Fillers In Western StatesBy Waldemar F. Dietrich
Mineral fillers are relatively inert chemically under the conditions of use but have physical properties* that modify those of the materials in which they are incorporated. The mineral fillers consi
Jan 8, 1959
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Production Engineering - Bottom-hole Pressures in Oil WellsBy C. V. Millikan, C. V. Sidwell
There is nothing more important in petroleum engineering than a definite knowledge of the pressure at the bottom of an oil well at any existing operating condition, and the relation of this pressure t
Jan 1, 1931
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Part XI - Communications - Decohesion in Ductile Fracture InitiationBy J. W. Spretnak
It is well-established that decohesions occurring at the interface of the matrix and rigid inclusions and second-phase particles are prime causes of ductile fracture initiation. It is not clear, howev
Jan 1, 1967
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NEW Haven Paper - Fires in Anthracite Coal MinesBy T. M. Williams
DURING the year just ended we have had three great fires in the mines in the Wilkes-Barre district. One at the Empire Colliery, one at the Prospect shaft, and the other at the Baltimore old mine. It i
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New York Paper - Volatilization in Assaying (with Discussion)By Frederic P. 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 gold
Jan 1, 1921
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Rock Property Tests In A Stiff Testing MachineBy J. C. Jaeger, G. A. Wiebols, N. G. W. Cook
It is usual practice in engineering to design a stable structure by ensuring that the stresses in the elements of the structure are always less than their strength, which may be defined as the yield s
Jan 1, 1972
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Conditions Of Stable Equilibrium In Iron-Carbon AlloysBy H. A. Schwartz
FROM time to time, one of the authors has had occasion to investigate the graphitizing reaction and has published the results mainly as discussion1 of the work of other investigators. In view, therefo
Jan 8, 1922
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Aging Phenomena in a Silver-rich Copper AlloyBy Morris Cohen
IT has been known for several years that in certain age-hardenable alloys precipitation of finely divided particles occurs simultaneously with the changes in physical properties; while, in other alloy
Jan 1, 1936
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Effect Of Sulfur And Oxides In Ordnance SteelBy William Priestley
IN THE manufacture of gun forgings and other steel parts that, in service, are subject to sudden high stresses and shocks, it is most desirable to use steel possessing the greatest toughness and ducti
Jan 12, 1921
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Old Southern Blast Furnaces in the Birmingham DistrictBy AIME AIME
THE accompanying photograph: submitted by C. L. Bransford, assistant district manager of the Republic Steel Corp., in Birmingham. Ala., shows the remains of the old Tannehill blast furnaces, one of th
Jan 1, 1936
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Production - Foreign - Petroleum Development in Germany during 1936By Walter Kauenhowen
GeRmany's crude-oil production during 1936 totaled 3,112,494 bbl., an increase of 5.2 per cent over the 3,007,711 bbl. produced in 1935. The official monthly production figures published in 19
Jan 1, 1937
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Top Executives Highly Paid In Nonferrous Metals IndustryBy S. Robinson Brainard
In 1957 the pay of chief executives in the nonferrous metals industry was well above average when compared with other major industries. Furthermore, it continued to rise last year while sales declined
Jan 10, 1958
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Recent Developments in the Manufacture of Lightweight AggregatesBy John A. Ruppert, John E. Conley
Shortages of cinders, largely resulting from industrial plants converting to fuel-oil, together with an enhanced building activity, have seriously affected the cinder block and lightweight concrete ma
Jan 4, 1950
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Use of Mobile Crushers in the Minerals IndustryBy H. G. Kok
The continuous increase in energy costs has made it necessary to consider a broader use of belt conveyors for the transportation of material from the mine pit to the processing plant. Hard rock has to
Jan 1, 1983
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Homestake's Bulldog Mountain Carbon-In-Pulp Silver PlantBy Steven Mitchell
BACKGROUND Homestake Mining Company began milling operations at the Bulldog Mountain Mine near Creede, Colorado in 1969. The Bulldog Mill, rated at 350 tpd, produces a bulk flotation condentrate a
Jan 1, 1983
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Research on Ground Stability in Underground Coal MiningBy Richard W. Markley
The predominant methods for mining coal in the USA are room and pillar and longwall. Approximately 95 percent of the coal is mined by room and pillar and 5 percent by longwall. The U.S. Department of
Jan 1, 1983
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A Geologist's Plea for More Freedom in PublicationBy Yeatman, Pope
FOR many years geologists have felt that mining companies should adopt a more liberal policy in the publication of their reports. The increasing usefulness of the geologist to the mining profession in
Jan 1, 1938