Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Production Engineering and Engineering Research - Some Studies on the Porosity and Permeability of Rocks (With Discussion)By F. G. Tickell, R. C. McCurdy, O. E. Mechem
The behavior of fluids in the voids of a rock is fundamental to the study of many of the problems of oil-field development and production. For it is by virtue of these openings between grains that oil
Jan 1, 1933
-
Surface Chemistry of Clays and ShalesBy Allen Garrison
THE chemistry of clays and shales has been assuming increasing importance in the petroleum industry, and two factors have greatly influenced this trend. The first has been the growing evidence that th
Jan 1, 1939
-
Minerals Beneficiation - Dry Autogenous Grinding and Dry Magnetic Separation of Iron OresBy R. Janes, F. Everard
Pilot plant studies have been conducted on a variety of iron ores of differing composition and grain size to test their amenability to dry autogeneous grinding and dry magnetic concentration. A genera
Jan 1, 1962
-
Baltimore Paper - The Manufacture of Soda by the Ammonia ProcessBy Oswald J. Heinrich
The serious objections to the Leblanc soda process may be enumerated as follows: 1st. The total loss of sulphur employed, equal to about one-third of soda produced. Various processes have been propose
Jan 1, 1879
-
Determining The Constants Of Oil-Production Decline CurvesBy Harry Roeser
Short cuts for determining the constants of oil decline curves, with the method of least squares as a starting point, are presented and applications made to practical examples. The nature of the raw d
Jan 6, 1924
-
Manganese Extraction By Carbamate Solutions And The Chemistry Of New Manganese-Ammonia ComplexesBy Reginald S. Dean
THE widespread occurrence of manganese in low grade oxide and carbonate ores not amenable to mechanical concentration has led to extensive investigations of hydrometallurgical methods for producing a
Jan 1, 1952
-
Arizona Paper - The Decomposition and Reduction of Lead Sulphate at Elevated TemperaturesBy W. Mostowitsch
Lead sulphate occurs as anglesite, and is formed in every roasting of lead sulphides or sulpho-salts containing lead. In smelting in the blast furnace an ore containing natural or artificial lead sulp
Jan 1, 1917
-
Dispersion of Clays and Shales by Fluid MotionBy Allen Garrison
IT is the purpose of this article to present. the results of an investiga-tion of certain clay and shale suspensions having viscosities that are materially influenced by fluid motion, and to discuss t
Jan 1, 1939
-
Age-hardening of Duralumin (1938)By Morris Cohen
WITHIN the past two years, a number of publications have called attention to the double peaks, or stages, that appear in the hardness and strength curves of certain aging alloys. The author has shown
Jan 1, 1938
-
Lake Superior Paper - Casting and Molding Steel Ingots (with Discussion)By Emil Gathmann
Steel as it is poured, or teemed, into the mold for forming the ingot may be broadly separated into two divisions; i.e., effervescing or gassy steel, also termed evolution steel, and non-effervescing
Jan 1, 1922
-
New York Paper - Mine-drainage Stream Pollution (with Discussion)By Andrew B. Crichton
No more important question has come before the coal industry in the past decade than the prevention of stream pollution by mine drainage; especially in Pennsylvania, where large areas of coal land hav
Jan 1, 1923
-
Successful Meeting at Salt Lake CityBy M. W. Von Bernewitz
AN important regional meeting of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers was held, at Salt Lake City on Aug. 22 to 26, jointly with the fifth annual meeting of the Western Divis
Jan 10, 1927
-
Surface Chemistry Of Clays And Shales (83a9d26b-2694-4c0d-a30f-d40b6dc2c8c4)By Allen D. Garrison
THE chemistry of clays and shales has been assuming increasing importance in the petroleum industry, and two factors have greatly influenced this trend. The first has been the growing evidence that th
Jan 1, 1939
-
Reaction of the Living Body to Different Types of Mineral Dusts with and without Complicating InfectionBy Leroy Gardner
EVERY reader of this paper is well aware of the fact that the prolonged inhalation of large amounts of free silica dust results in fibrosis of the lungs, and that other inorganic dusts, except those o
Jan 1, 1938
-
Refractories (654057b0-c5e4-4220-b917-7b3df4cdbe06)By R. P. Heuer, Paul M. Tyler
THE literature on refractories, although fairly extensive, is so scattered through books and periodicals as to be difficult of access to the general reader and most of the individual papers serve mer
Jan 1, 1949
-
Geology of the Yoquivo, Chihuahua Mining DistrictBy C. W. Hall
Owing to its isolation and comparatively small tonnage, the Yoquivo district is not widely known; though financially important and, geologically, quite interesting. San Francisco dc Yoquivo, the cent
Jan 2, 1926
-
Papres - Mining Geology - Structure and Mineralization along the London Fault, Colorado (With Discussion)By Quentin D. Singewald, B. S. Butler
Some of the broader relations between structure and ore deposition along the London fault, deduced from a thorough study of the geology of the eastern part of the Mosquito Range, should be of general
Jan 1, 1937
-
Unit Operation of Oil Pool - Effect of Proration on Decline, Potential and Ultimate Production of Oil Well (With Discussion)By H. H. Power, C. H. Pishny
When an oil operator becomes a party to a proration agreement he may wonder, with good cause, whether production prorated .today is merely deferred until tomorrow or whether oil might be lost. Various
Jan 1, 1931
-
New York Paper - Mine-drainage Stream Pollution (with Discussion)By Andrew B. Crichton
No more important question has come before the coal industry in the past decade than the prevention of stream pollution by mine drainage; especially in Pennsylvania, where large areas of coal land hav
Jan 1, 1923
-
Production Engineering - Repressuring during Early Stages of Development (With Discussion)By C. E. Beecher
The application of gas or air under pressure to obtain more oil from a sand which has been practically exhausted by ordinary production methods has been practiced to a limited extent for many years. U
Jan 1, 1929