Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Progress Report on Grinding At Tennessee CopperBy J. F. Myers
AT the Regional meeting in Columbus, Ohio, in September 1949, the authors presented a progress report of the first year's operation with a Hardinge tricone mill in closed circuit with a Dorr hydr
Jan 1, 1950
-
How To Finance Mineral ProspectsBy Edgar F. Cruft
INTRODUCTION It is sometimes said that "mines are made, and not found." I rather doubt that the exploration geologist would be overly sympathetic to that statement, and, of course, like most one-li
Jan 1, 1985
-
Inclined Mine Shaft Sunk In The AdirondacksBy Fred W. Stiefel
To open the Fisher Hill mine of the Republic Steel Corporation, it was necessary to sink an inclined shaft into the rock and excavate stations, drifts, and ore pockets. This inclined shaft, or slope,
Jan 1, 1945
-
Commercial Movement of Zinc and CopperBy Salinger, Herbert
WITH the large amount of metallurgical re- search work now being done and the constant effort of the engineer to effect economies of operation, I think it is a safe prediction that the next few years
Jan 1, 1928
-
Haulage Methods Stress Speed, Capacity – RailroadFor handling rough rock, the shovel-train system is unexcelled. The ideal application is a physically large, but not excessively deep, open-pit mine from which the coarsely blasted ore and waste must
Jan 10, 1967
-
Convalescent Europe ? Personal Observations of What Is Going On ThereBy Harvey S. Mudd
WHEN talking about Europe it is well to endeavor to keep politics and economics apart but they have become so intermingled in recent years that the discussion of one topic inevitably leads to the othe
Jan 1, 1947
-
Pure Irons - Ancient and ModernBy J. G. Thompson
IRON, iron everywhere, but hardly a particle of pure unadulterated iron for the metallurgist to use as a base for the protean characteristics that he develops in the alloys of iron-the modern steels.
Jan 1, 1940
-
Reservoir Engineering – General - Pulsed Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Studies of Porosity, Movable Fluid and Permeability of SandstonesBy A. Timur
Fluid flow properties of porous media have long been of interest in such varied disciplines as geology, geophysics, soil mechanics, and chemical, civil, and mechanical engineering. This interest has r
Jan 1, 1970
-
1948 - Petroleum - Today and TomorrowBy Kirtley F. Mather
FROM almost every point of view, petroleum was "strategic mineral number one" during the World War that ended in 1945. Even the spectacular advent of the atomic bomb in the final days of the conflict
Jan 1, 1948
-
Development-Sampling And Ore-Valuation Of Gold-Mines.By C. BARING HORIVOOD
(Chattanooga Meeting, October, 1908.) THIS paper is intended, in the light of recent investigations, to call attention to some of the essential features of good practice in sampling and mine-valuatio
Jan 1, 1909
-
Papers - Crystallography of Austenite Decomposition (T.P. 1212, with discussion)By Alden B. Greninger, Alexander R. Troiano
Metallurgists have long believed that martensite in steel forms as plates along the octahedral {111} planes of austenite. Much has been written about mechanisms whereby units of the austenite lattice
Jan 1, 1940
-
Papers - Crystallography of Austenite Decomposition (T.P. 1212, with discussion)By Alden B. Greninger, Alexander R. Troiano
Metallurgists have long believed that martensite in steel forms as plates along the octahedral {111} planes of austenite. Much has been written about mechanisms whereby units of the austenite lattice
Jan 1, 1940
-
Gasoline From ?Synthetic " Crude OilDiscussion of the paper of WALTER 0. SNELLING, presented at the New York meeting, February, 1915, and printed in Bulletin No. 100, April, 1915, pp. 695 to 704. A. F. LUCAS, Washington, D. C.-Are the
Jan 5, 1915
-
Transportation, Maintenance, VentilationBy J. W. Buch
IN THE FIELD of track haulage, interest has seemed to center on the question of larger mine cars both for handling material from loading point to shaft bottom or surface, and for shuttle service. Savi
Jan 1, 1942
-
Mining Geology - Rapid Expansion of Field Studies ConspicuousBy Chas. H. Behre
MINING geology, both theoretical and practical, continued to make noteworthy progress during 1938. Mining companies generally, stimulated especially by the improvement in economic conditions during th
Jan 1, 1939
-
14. Geology and Mineral Deposits, Midcontinent United StatesBy Frank G. Snyder
The Precambrian of Midcontinent United States includes a metamorphic belt of probable Middle Precambrian age, a belt of Keweenawan volcanics and sediments, and widespread igneous activity that extende
Jan 1, 1968
-
Iron Manufacture in MexicoBy J. P. Carson
(Read at the Wilkes-Barre Meeting, May, 1877.) THE works of the Tula Iron Company are in the Republic of Mexico, State of Jalisco, twenty-eight leagues southwest of Guadal¬ajara, ten leagues northw
Jan 1, 1878
-
Economic Aspects of Unit Operation of Oil PoolsBy Joseph E. Pogue
THERE are two methods employed in the development of oil pools. The older and dominant method is one in which the primary object is the protection of the underground deposit from drainage through comp
Jan 1, 1930
-
Ore FindingBy Augustus Locke
WHY should I, a geologist, be coming before you to talk about finding ore? Certainly, the great discoveries of the past have not been made by geologists, but by men of very different tastes and traini
Jan 1, 1926
-
Crushing Resistance Of Various OresBy Luther Lennox
DURING the last few years, one of the great problems in the milling of all ores has been that of crushing. This subject involves not merely the cost of the operation, but also the selection of the pro
Jan 8, 1918