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The Achotla Chloridizing Mill (93b3f6d3-9582-4919-bbd6-c8e8bac9b1e7)By H. P. Allen
THE Achotla mill of the Cia. Minera de Pe[n]oles is of special interest in that it is one of the few still employing the chloridization process. The ore milled comes from the Suriana mine and consists
Jan 1, 1937
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Developments in Oklahoma in 1939By Thomas Brownfield
The chronicle of the oil industry in Oklahoma in 1939 is one of declining production bolstered by strenuous efforts to find new pools or new producing horizons in the older, highly exploited, relative
Jan 1, 1940
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Capillary Phenomena as Related to Oil Production (With Discussion)By Frederick G. Tickell
Petroleum engineers are displaying considerable interest in those fundamental properties of matter and energy that control the phenomena of oil and gas production. The subject is a difficult one to in
Jan 1, 1929
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Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - A History of the Bessemer Manufacture in AmericaBy Robert W. Hunt
The memorable features of American history have been making fast during the last century, and notably so since 1860; and they are by no means confined to political or to any one branch of scientific d
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New York Paper - Significance of Manganese in American Steel Metallurgy (with Discussion)By F. H. Willcox
In Bessemer-steel practice, air is blown through a bath of iron, or projected strongly upon its surface to burn out silicon, manganese, and cafbon. Toward the end of the blow, when the iron is not pro
Jan 1, 1917
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Papers - Melting and Casting Metals - Oxides in Brass (With Discussion)By O. W. Ellis
In view of the extensive use of the brasses and bronzes in engineering practice it is indeed surprising that so little scientific work has been done on the oxides in these alloys. Recognition of the i
Jan 1, 1930
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Papers - Nonferrous Reduction Metallurgy - Recovery of Selenium and Tellurium at Copper Cliff, Ontario (Metals Technology, Feb. 1938)By Frederic Benard
Recovery of selenium and tellurium at Copper Cliff by the Ontario Refining Co. has been previously described by the writer.l During 1935 a new building was erected to house this operation and descript
Jan 1, 1943
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Papers - The Achotla Chloridizing Mill (T. P. 773, with discussion)By H. P. Allen
The Achotla mill of the Cia. Minera de Penoles is of special interest in that it is one of the few still employing the chloridization process. The ore milled comes from the Suriana mine and consists o
Jan 1, 1939
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Mechanical Separation Of Sulfur Minerals From CoalBy J. R. Campbell
A DOZEN years or so ago, the general superintendent of our company, now the president, Mr. W. H. Clingerman, detailed me to make a study of the coal-washing problem and collect data, which threw me in
Jan 9, 1919
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Production Engineering - Principles of Well Spacing (T. P. 1086, with discussion)By Morris Muskat
Although the problem of well spacing is one of the most important involved in the production of oil, it must be considered at the present time as still subject to further development. The published li
Jan 1, 1940
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Papers - Ground Movement and Subsidence - Subsidence Following Extraction of Ore from Limestone Replacement Deposits. Warren Mining District, Bisbec, Arizona (With Discussion)By Carl Trischka
During fifty-three years of mining operations in the Warren mining district, the mineralization has been found to cover an area roughly 2 miles long by 155 miles wide. Ore extraction from the richer p
Jan 1, 1934
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Determination Of Dust Losses At The Copper Queen Reduction WorksBy J. Moore Samuel
INTRODUCTORY BEFORE the year 1909, no measurements of dust losses and flue gases had been made at the Copper Queen Reduction Works, at Douglas, Ariz. At that time the "unaccounted" loss of the smelte
Jan 6, 1916
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Economics - A Comparison of Old and New Oil FieldsBy L. C. Snider
During the past few years a number of large and highly productive oil fields have been discovered in the United States. The immediate oversupply which has resulted, together with the circumstances und
Jan 1, 1933
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St. Louis Paper - October, 1917 - Increasing Dividends Through Personnel Work (with Discussion)By T. T. Read
Personnel work is a term recently introduced to cover the great variety of activities in industrial work that deal with the human factor. Much attention has been focusscd upon individual phases of per
Jan 1, 1918
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Effects Of Steelmaking Practice Upon The Properties Of SteelTHE primary interest in the subject of this chapter lies in the fact that various heats of steel made to the same chemical specification do not always have the same properties. We are referring here,
Jan 1, 1944
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Minerals Beneficiation - Leaching and Recovery of Manganese from Magnetic Separator Tailings of Manganiferous Iron Ores Reduced by the R-N ProcessBy W. J. Carlson, I. lwasaki
Manganese and silica in nonmagnetic tailings from the direct reduction-magnetic separation step were so closely associated that no physical concentration methods were effective. Dilute sulfuric acid d
Jan 1, 1968
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Papers - Intermetallic Solid Solutions (With Discussion)By Eric J. Jette
In thermodynamic studies of gas mixtures and liquid solutions, the respective problems have been greatly simplified by the use of two general limiting laws; Dalton's law of partial pressures and
Jan 1, 1934
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Papers - Closed-circuit Grinding of Cement Raw Materials at Leeds (T. P. 1096, with discussion)By T. B. Counselman
AfteR several years study, the Universal Atlas Cement Co. decided to rebuild its plant at Leeds, Alabama. The entire old plant, which was to operate during the new construction, was then to be scrappe
Jan 1, 1939
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Papers - Deformation of Beta Brass (With Discussion)By Alden B. Greninger
In a recent study1 of the deformation of metastable beta copper-zinc and beta copper-tin crystals, it was established that the parallel markings that appear on the surface of these crystals after slig
Jan 1, 1938
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Drilling and Fluids and Cement - An Analysis and the Control of Lost CirculationBy P. P. Scott, George C. Howard
During the drilling of wells, fractures which are created or widened by drilling fluid pressure are suspected of being a frequent cause of lost circulation. A study of the variables which are believed
Jan 1, 1951