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Papers - Slag Control for Recarburized Rail Steel (With Discussion)By A. P. Miller, T. S. Washburn
Improved procedure in the manufacture of rail steel has come as the rail user demanded better wearing qualities combined with greater unit weight. With each weight increase per lineal yard has come gr
Jan 1, 1935
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Choice Of Underground Method At A Colliery - Factors Which Enter Into The Decision Listed And IllustratedBy Newell G. Alford
With the workable area of coal prospected and known as to workability and quantity and sampled and tested for desired quality comes the determination of the projection and method of working. The best
Jan 1, 1932
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Steel Ladle Make-Up And Pouring Of Bop Heats For Both Ingot And Continuous Caster ProductionBy G. W. Hodges
The Basic Oxygen Process shop at Gary Works is a three vessel shop tapping 220 ton heats. The larger portion of the heats are teemed into ingot molds with the remaining heats being continuously cast i
Jan 1, 1972
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Determination Of The Basal And Lateral Surfaces Of Kaolins : Variations With Types Of Crystalline DefectsBy O. Lietard, J. Yvon, R. Mercier, J. F. Delon, J. M. Cases
INTRODUCTION Fineness is one of the main characteristics of powders and this parameter is the object of several definitions based on criteria connected with their uses as well as their determinatio
Jan 1, 1980
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Chicago Paper - The Spitzkasten and Settling-TankBy R. H. Richards, C. E. Locke
In "Sorting Before Sizing " (a paper first announced at the Pittsburgh meeting, February, 1896, but delayed in preparation and now presented at the present meeting) it is shown that if slime-tables ar
Jan 1, 1898
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Slurries, Sludges, Slimes and Water Treatment (31e31d6e-a81c-47c7-9a98-e285c8a08049)By E. A. Reilly, G. R. Gardner, F. P. Lasseter
THE methods that may be applied to the treatment of slurries and water, as these are related to practical coal-preparation problems, are concerned essentially with the movements of solids suspended in
Jan 1, 1943
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The Significance of Raw MaterialsBy M. L. Requa
EVERY forward step in civilization brings with it an increase in population and increasing demand for raw materials. Modern civilization, because of its industrial development, depends more and more f
Jan 1, 1925
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Canadian Paper - Notes on Mine-Surveying Instruments, with Special Reference to Mr. Dunbar D, Scott's Paper on their Evolution, and its DiscussionBy Benjamin Smith Lyman
PAGE I. ANCIENT HISTORY,........... 57 Accepted Fables ; Babylonian Mapping ; First Surveying. II. COMPASS,.............59 Chinese Invention; Marco Polo; First European Compasses ; Early Knowledg
Jan 1, 1902
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Part X - Staff of AIME March 1966Jan 1, 1967
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Part VIII - Staff of AIME March 1966Jan 1, 1967
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Biographical Notice of Franklin GuitermanBy R. W. Raymond
Franklin Guiterman was born March 7, 1856, in Cincinnati, Ohio, where his father, William Guiterman, was at that time engagcd in the wholesale dry-goods business. Both of his parents were natives of B
Jan 1, 1918
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The Concept of Ore Reserves ? Many Factors Enter Into Proper Definition of the TermBy S. G., Lasky
IT seems to be in the nature of concepts that they have many meanings, and that the meaning best reflecting the primary interests of a person tends to be accepted by him as the normal meaning of the c
Jan 1, 1945
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Discussions - Of Mr. Webster's Paper on Proposed Standard Specifications for Steel Forgings and Castings (see p. 170)Gus C. Henning, New York City: In taking up the discussion of these specifications it is necessary that I give definitions of what I understand under the term " Specifications." There may be three kin
Jan 1, 1903
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History and Trend of Mining at Climax - Displacement of Chute-and-Grizzly System By Slusher Method Is Most Notable AdvanceBy William J., Coulter
IN the early days of Colorado mining, between 1880 and 1900, when Leadville, Kokomo, and Robinson were boom mining camps, the entire area around Climax for a matter of fifteen miles was overrun with p
Jan 1, 1946
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Breaking And CrushingBy Homer W. Riley, C S. Jenkins
SMALL power-driven, toothed, cast-iron rolls were used first to break anthracite in 1844. Prior to that time, men with hammers, who stood on perforated cast-iron- plates, .broke the large lumps into c
Jan 1, 1943
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International Fellowship of EngineersBy AIME AIME
MOST of us are far .from home, and yet our Japanese hosts- have made us feel very much at home. Here in the Orient we engineers are .learning a new meaning for the word "orientation"- hereafter that e
Jan 1, 1929
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Coal Follows ThroughBy E. G. Bailey
PLANTS that normally burn coal now able too obtain a substantial increase over their normal supply for their greater power needs, and also additional tonnage for extra storage against the uncertaintie
Jan 1, 1942
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Industrial Minerals of North Carolina ? Pegmatites Worked for Many ProductsBy Jasper L. Stuckey
GEOGRAPHICALLY, North Carolina consists of three divisions, the coastal plain on the east, the piedmont plateau in the center, and the Appalachian mountain region on the west. Geologically, the State
Jan 1, 1947
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