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Tensile Fracture Mechanics From Fracture Surface MorphologyBy R. J. Lutton
Basic features occurring on tensile fracture surfaces in rock are hackle marks, steps, and rib marks. Rib marks define the leading edge of the fracture and indicate that it was free of irregularities.
Jan 1, 1971
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Completion Practices Related To Well ProductivityBy W. J. Travers
SEVERAL new procedures for completing oil wells have been developed in recent years. Each method when used where properly applicable promises to be a definite aid to operators in lowering development
Jan 1, 1942
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Florida Paper - A Water-Cooling Apparatus (see Discussion p. 960)By Carl Henrich
In the planning and erection of smelting-works, especially of such as contain the modern large water-jacketed blast-furnaces, we are often confronted with an insufficiency in the watersupply. It may b
Jan 1, 1896
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X-ray Study on the Constitution of Iron-silicon Alloys Containing from 14 to 33.4 Per Cent SiliconBy Earl Greiner
THE constitution of the iron-silicon alloys containing from 14 to 33.4 weight per cent silicon has been studied by a number of investigators, whose results have been reviewed in a monograph published
Jan 1, 1936
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Selenite Ion Adsorption on Clays and Other Mechanisms for Selenium Removal From Uranium Mill TailingsBy T. M. Olson, B. G. Lewis
The adsorption of selenite on bentonite, kaolinite, and an iron--coated illite was studied to determine the importance of several soil variables on selenite removal from uranium mill tailings pond see
Jan 1, 1984
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The Shear Strength Of RocksBy Rudolph G. Wuerker
With stepped-up work in rock mechanics, more and more data on strength and elastic properties of rocks has become available. Results of measurements of tensile strength, in addition to determinations
Jan 10, 1959
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Economic Application of the Insoluble Residue MethodBy H. S. McQueen
THE insoluble residue method for the examination and correlation of limestones and dolomites, or other sedimentary rocks containing calcium and magnesium carbonates, originated and was developed in th
Jan 1, 1936
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New York Paper - 068-38 Diamond-drill Sampling Methods (with Discussion) Robert Davis LongyearBy Robert Davis Longyear
In diamond-drill work, a true sample consists of all the material cut by the bit—both core and cuttings. As the recovery of this sample is the object of diamond drilling, the utmost care should be tak
Jan 1, 1923
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Streamlining The North American Taconite IndustryBy Richard B. Greenwalt, John M. Bertram, George E. Aiken
Agglomeration developments in the iron ore industry of North America over the past twenty years are closely related to shifting patterns in commercially acceptable ore grades and even the definition o
Jan 10, 1973
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Sand Filling At The Galena MineBy Norman Visnes
EARLY in 1954, as initial development of the Galena mine was being finished, plans for stoping operations became the foremost consideration of the operating management. The Galena is being operated un
Jan 1, 1957
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Longwall Mining - Shearers And Ploughs And System ConsiderationsBy Robert Stefanko
Longwall mining which has a long history abroad, was used only on a limited scale in the United States until less than 20 years ago. Modern longwall mining in this country can be said to have begun in
Jan 1, 1981
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New York Paper - 068-38 Diamond-drill Sampling Methods (with Discussion) Robert Davis LongyearBy Robert Davis Longyear
In diamond-drill work, a true sample consists of all the material cut by the bit—both core and cuttings. As the recovery of this sample is the object of diamond drilling, the utmost care should be tak
Jan 1, 1923
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Colorado Nahcolite Deposits: Geology and Outlook for DevelopmentBy John R. Dyni
Colorado nahcolite deposits, estimated at 29 Gt, formed in an asymmetric permanent-lake basin whose waters were rich in algae and sulfate-reducing bacteria. Nahcolite (NaHCO3) occurs in oil shale of t
Jan 1, 1982
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An Overview Of The Bauxite Supply/Demand Position For AustraliaBy George C. Reynolds
INTRODUCTION The overall importance of the minerals industry during the next 20 years was highlighted In "The Global 200 Report to the President" (Barney, 1982) in the following terms: "The in
Jan 1, 1982
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The Physical Chemistry Of HydrometallurgyBy E. Peters
As in other fields of Extractive Metallurgy, Hydrometallurgy is preoccupied with separation processes and with oxidation-reduction processes. The physical chemistry of each type of process can be desc
Jan 1, 1973
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Geology of US Phosphate Deposits (f2d38508-36d8-4a4a-8fca-3044982bc88e)By T. M. Gurr
The United States is the world's leading producer of phosphate rock. In 1975 according to the US Bureau of Mines' statistics, 44.3 million tonnes (48.8 million st) of phosphate rock were pro
Jan 1, 1980
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High Gradient Magnetic Separations Of Fine Particles From Industrial StreamsBy P. F. Ahner, Leonidas Petrakis, Fred E. Kiviat
High gradient magnetic separations (HGMS) is a recently developed technique in which magnetic micron-size particles contained in a flowing fluid medium can be extracted from that medium. HGMS is prese
Jan 1, 1980
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The Effect of a Coating of Polybutene on the Fatigue Properties of Lead Alloys ? with Discussion on Coatings for Lead AlloysBy George M. Bouton, Lawrence Ferguson
The experiments described in this publication were inspired by the Bell System's large interest in lead-alloy sheathed cables and by the wide range of fatigue and corroding conditions to which th
Jan 1, 1945
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Launder Washers (d3d794a3-a056-4272-8fce-b8c930b174e5)By C. P. Proctor, J. T. Crawford
TROUGH washers were among the earliest methods used for concentrating ores; they are referred to by Agricola about the middle of the sixteenth century as already being used while the hand- operated ji
Jan 1, 1943
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An Apparatus for Determining Thermomagnetic Behavior of Slags, and Some Preliminary Results Obtained with ItBy B. A. Rogers
ACCORDING to petrographic investigations, 1-4 cooled steel furnace slags contain a number of substances that have been shown to be ferro-magnetic5,6 and hence capable of undergoing appreciable changes
Jan 1, 1939