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Reaching The Miner With Safety EducationBy Herbert A. Wendel
Reaching the miner with safety education" is R the ultimate goal, the main objective, of every safety program in the mining industry. If we can get safety education to every worker, and it is properly
Jan 1, 1965
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Stabilization of Waste Water from Sulfide Ore Milling OperationsBy U. Oko
The cause and the effect of disposing of tailings water from sulfide ore milling operation were examined. Dissolved metallic ions as well as dissolved sulfur-oxygen compounds (polythionates) can prove
Jan 1, 1976
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Digital Computer May Find New Use in Determining Mine Ventilation NetworksBy Howard L. Hartman, Burke O. Trafton
There is a fruitful area of computer competence which has gone virtually unnoticed by the mining industry. This is in the solution of its numerous fluid-flow distribution problems, involving the circu
Jan 9, 1963
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Minerals Beneficiation - Infrared Studies of Products of the Reaction Between Activated Zinc Sulfide and Potassium Ethyl XanthateBy H. E. Powell, A. A. Cochran, R. E. Coleman
Infrared spectroscopy, employing the internal reflection method in conjunction with solvent extraction techniques, was used to study surface reactions between aqueous potassium ethyl xanthate and both
Jan 1, 1968
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Washington D.C. Paper - Iron and Steel considered as Structural Materials – A Discussion, Papers and Remarks by (35ece10a-4fd1-49da-9f09-68052f06928d)By O. Chanute
In discussion of Mr. Macdonald's paper, I can say little more thau to add t~ the general acknowledgments of iguorae, and like several of the gentlemen who have preceded me, make one of those conf
Jan 1, 1882
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American Zinc Company’s Operations In The East Tennessee Zinc DistrictBy M. J. Langley
The American Zinc Company’s mining operations in East Tennessee are located in Knox and Jefferson Counties. Mineralization occurs, intermittently, through a strike length of more than 30 miles, from n
Jan 1, 1970
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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
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General - Effect of Combinations of Strain ant1 Heat Treatment on Properties of Some Age-hardening Copper AlloysBy Earle E. Schumacher, W. C. Ellis
For the purpose of developing combinations of higher strength and conductivity than are obtainable by heat treatment alone in the age-hardening copper alloys, an investigation has been made of the eff
Jan 1, 1931
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pH Control Of Flotation Feed In A 21,500 Tpd ConcentratorBy C. Jackson, J. J. Harrington
The pH control system at Kennecott Copper Corporation's Nevada Mines Division concentrator consists of two independent systems, lime dilution and lime addition. Lime dilution is accomplished in a
Jan 1, 1978
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Minerals Beneficiation - Relationships Between Rheological and Flocculating Properties of Polymer FlocculantsBy J. M. W. Mackenzie
The rheological properties of aqueous solutions of several commercial flocculants were investigated using a rotating coaxial cylinder viscometer. Similarities between the pH-apparent viscosity relatio
Jan 1, 1964
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Lake Superior Paper - Special Forms of Blast-Furnace Charging-ApparatusBy T. F. Witherbee
That the single charging-bell, properly proportioned, is a good all-around device for distributing material in a blast-furnace can scarcely be questioned; yet it is equally true that, in some cases, i
Jan 1, 1905
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Can we Transmit Power in Large Amount by Electricity?By N. S. Keith
(Read at the Wilkes-Barre Meeting, May, 1877.) THIS question is suggested by a statement made by Dr. Siemens, widely printed in the journals of the day, that a continuous rod of copper, thirty miles
Jan 1, 1878
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Wilkes-Barre Paper - Can we Transmit Power in Large Amount by Electricity?By N. S. Keith
This question is suggested by a statement made by Dr. Siemens, widely printed in the journals of the day, that a continuous rod of copper, thirty miles in length and three inches in diameter, is capab
Jan 1, 1879
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Reclamation of Metal from Brass-foundry RefuseBy F. L. Wolf
THE reclaiming of metallics from slag and sweepings is of vital interest to every brass-foundry man, but the first cost and interest on the investment often make it prohibitive for the small foundry t
Jan 9, 1920
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Oil Development In Gulf Coastal Plain During 1923 (b772940c-e2eb-45ce-8ffd-d0cbc12fd174)By E. T. Dumble
THE development in the Gulf Coastal Plain for the year 1923 was entirely devoid of any spectacular feature and was considerably less than that of 1922. No large fields were discovered and the principa
Jan 3, 1924
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New York Paper - Volatilization of Cuprous Chloride on Melting Copper Containing ChlorineBy S. Skowronski, K. W. McComas
Page Purpose of investigation.....................'. 354 Details of experiments........................ 357 Experiment Series No. 1, melting copper containing chlorine under carbon dioxide.
Jan 1, 1919
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Report Of President P. N. MooreYour outgoing President, following the worthy example of distinguished predecessors, submits a reckoning of his stewardship. He renders this fully realizing that without the hearty cooperation of Dire
Jan 3, 1918
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Committee On Increase Of Membership.C. R. CORNING, Chairman. ADOLPHE E. BORIE, First Vice-Chairman. THOMAS T. READ, Secretary, Woolworth Bldg., New York, N. Y. Vie-Chairmen. JOHN H. ALLEN, GEORGE M. COLVOCORESSES, RICHARD M. ATWATE
Jan 5, 1913
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Peabody Looks at the Future of Surface Coal MiningSurface mining of coal is widely condemned as a despoiler of the countryside and wastrel of land and natural resources. Yet the fact has been as widely ignored that the ingenuity of those engaged in d
Jan 10, 1972
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Chemical Constraints On In-Situ Leaching And Metal RecoveryBy R. L. Curfman
From January 1, 1965 through July 5, 1970, the very difficult potash ore body of Texasgulf Inc. near Moab, Utah was mined by conventional methods. The mine was gassy, the temperature was high and stru
Jan 1, 1974