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The Forward Move in Mining TechnologyBy James J. Scott, John J. Reed
In a year fraught with difficulties, especially to small operators, the more stable mining organizations have shown a dynamic readiness to plunge ahead in the development of new mines, new and ingenio
Jan 2, 1963
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Smelting Copper Concentrates In A ConverterBy F. J. Longworth
For a number of years an intensive study has been made to improve the blast-furnace practice at Copperhill not only as to costs but to provide a good grade of gas for the acid plants. This study, took
Jan 9, 1924
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Baltimore Paper - Imperfections in Surveying InstrumentsBy John Henry Harden
With imperfect instruments it is impossible to make accurate surveys; the results are inaccurate maps, with their attendant consequences. The design of the writer is to describe an improved form of tr
Jan 1, 1879
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Oil Development In Ecuador During 1923By Joseph Sinclair
THE Republic of Ecuador is situated partly in the northern and partly in the southern hemisphere. The equatorial line passes about 11 miles north of Quito, and. divides the country into two almost equ
Jan 3, 1924
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Mining - Underground Mining in Minnesota TaconiteBy E. P. Pfleider, D. H. Yardley
Layers of magnetic taconite of above average magnetic iron content extend down dip on the Mesabi Range to depths beyond the reach of open pit mining. A selected layer with thickness of 75 to 100 ft un
Jan 1, 1963
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Papers - Blast Furnace Practice in FranceBy F. Clerf
Blast-furnace practice in France is determined more or less by the character of the ores used. Some French ores are siliceous and others are calcareous, therefore by proper burdening a self-fluxing mi
Jan 1, 1937
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Flocculation Problems In The Coal IndustryBy R. Hogg
INTRODUCTION The principal applications of the flocculation process in the coal industry lie in the area of waste water treatment. Consequently, the concern is more with the behavior of the associ
Jan 1, 1980
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Recent Progress in Non-Ferrous MetallurgyBy W. H. Bassett
THE subject assigned is rather a broad one but it, is doubtless expected that it will be dealt with as applying to metals and alloys and not to the ob-taining of metals from their ores. The liberty wi
Jan 5, 1927
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Engineers In The United States CensusAs a result of Engineering Council's request to the Director of the Census, the National Service Committee has been successful in effecting a reclassification of engineers so that all technical m
Jan 12, 1919
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Design Considerations in Large Mill GearsBy G. C. Mudd, E. J. Myers
Within the last 15 years David Brown Gear Industries has manufactured approximately 200 large mill gears over 6m diam., 58 of them over 9 m and up to 12 m diam. The experience has not been without pro
Jan 1, 1983
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Petroleum Production in Louisiana for 1945By J. HUNER
Twenty-four new fields were found in Louisiana during 1945. Of this number 15 were oil fields, eight were gas condensate, and one a dry gas field. None of these fields, with the exception of West Delh
Jan 1, 1946
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Petroleum Development In Illinois During 1924By Gail Moulton
THE oilfields in Illinois are located principally along the LaSalle anticline in the southeastern part of the state. The oil produced comes most largely from beds of Pennsylvanian and Mississippian ag
Jan 3, 1925
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Piping and Segregation in Steel IngotsBy H. M. Howe
A Discussion of the paper of Professor Howe, presented at the London Meeting, July, 1906, and printed in Bi-Monthly Bulletin, No. 14, March, 1907, pp. 169 to 274. SECRETARY'S NOTE.-M. Beutter&
Jul 1, 1907
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Playing The Odds In Rock MechanicsBy Gregory B. Baecher
Rock engineering involves uncertainties which are large and difficult to quantify. The traditional design approach to these uncertain- ties has been conservatism, and has been satisfactory to the exte
Jan 1, 1982
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Washington Survey - Mineral Issues In FluxBy Freeman Bishop
Copper production has been under Government scrutiny for many years because it's known as a concentrated industry which in turn creates what many economists label administrative prices. Neither o
Jan 1, 1970
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Colorado Paper - Gold in the GuyanasBy Henry G. Granger
DURING upwards of three thonsand miles of canoc-travel in South America, including several mishaps, the writer has unfortunately lost his book of notes taken during the year 1894 in Dutch Guyana, or S
Jan 1, 1897
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Role of Steel in Mineral SanctionsBy C. K. Leith
CERTAIN ideas on iron and steel sanctions to follow originated in a series of conferences held under the joint auspices of the War Department and Brookings Institute in Washington last spring. The vie
Jan 1, 1944
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The Gravity Meter in Underground ProspectingBy William Allen
For the past six years gravity surveys have been used for underground prospecting in the copper mines at Bisbee, Ariz. The primary purpose of the surveys has been to reduce the diamond drilling an
Mar 1, 1956
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In Steel’s Future – Self-Fluxed Pellets?By Edwin B. Johnson
The success of self-fluxed sinter in enhancing the operation of the blast furnace during the past few years has reasonably led to the assumption that the use of self-fluxed pellets might result in eve
Jan 3, 1963
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Slope Stability in Reclaimed Contour StrippingBy E. Topuz, G. Faulkner, M. Karmis, C. Haycocks
The Appalachian coal region of Virginia, southern West Virginia and Kentucky and the extreme eastern portion of Tennessee constitutes a unique area of surface coal mining activities. The area contains
Jan 1, 1983