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Mexican Paper - The Detection and Estimation of Small Quantities of Gold and SilverBy Luther Wagoner
For a number of years I have, at odd times, tried to perfect a method of assay sufficiently delicate to find and estimate minute quantities of gold and silver. The object in view was to examine rocks
Jan 1, 1902
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Honor RollThe Honor Roll includes the names of all members of the Institute whom we know to be on active military duty at the date of its compilation, February 7, 1918. We are aware that there are many others o
Jan 1, 1923
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Institute of Metals Division - The Quasibinary System PbTe-Bi (TN)By R. P. O’Shea
AS part of a program to investigate phase relationships in ternary systems containing semiconducting elements and compounds, an X-ray survey of alloys in the system Pb-Te-Bi was carried out which reve
Jan 1, 1962
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Petroleum Economics - Fuel Oil, The Safety Valve of the Petroleum Industry (With Discussion)By Charles J. Deegan
The purpose of this paper is to point out some features of the position of fuel oil and it's relationship to the economic balance and price structure of the petroleum industry. The term "fuel oil
Jan 1, 1929
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The Domestic Graphite Supply ProblemBy E. N. Cameron
Graphite has been included in U. S. lists of strategic minerals since the problem of mineral deficiencies was revealed during World War I. Since 1918 the domestic graphite industry has led a precariou
Oct 1, 1956
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The Reaction Between Manganese And Iron SulfideBy C. H. Jr. Herty
IT Is well known that manganese will desulfurize molten iron through the formation of manganese sulfide, which, being only slightly soluble in the metal, rises to and enters the slag where it remains
Jan 2, 1925
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Lake Superior Paper - Oil Possibilities in Northern Alabama (with Discussion)By D. R. Semmes
The possible oil territory of Alabama can be readily divided into two regions, the Paleozoic area of the north, and the Coastal Plain province of Cretaceous and younger formations lying to the south.
Jan 1, 1921
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Papers - Foreign Production - Russian Oil Fields in 1928 and 1929 (With Discussion)By B. B. Zavoico
Considerable progress has been made during the past year throughout the Russian petroleum industry. Perhaps the most remarkable achievement is the execution of the programs set out by the Central Plan
Jan 1, 1930
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Application of a Mixed Kinetics Model to the Leaching of Low Grade Copper Sulfide OresBy M. E. Wadsworth, R. D. Groves, B. W. Madsen
Experimental results obtained from large-scale (7 ton), long-term (500 days) leaching of low-tenor copper sulfide ores were interpreted by a geometric model involving the movement of a reaction zone t
Jan 1, 1976
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Metal Mining - Mining Operations at the Teniente Mine of the Braden Copper Company, Rancagua, ChileBy F. E Turton
THE town of Rancagua, at the junction of the state and Braden Copper Co. railroads, is located 82 km south of Santiago, the capital of Chile. From Rancagua 70 km to the east, situated in the Andes at
Jan 1, 1953
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Unprecedented Expansion In The Mining IndustryBy James K. Richardson
FIRST indications that mineral industries expansion is beginning to show results are contained in the report by Defense Mobilizer Charles E. Wilson, The Battle for Production. The report, submitted t
Jan 1, 1952
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Mine Safety in the Lake Superior RegionBy F. S. Crawford
IRON and copper are mined in the Lake Superior district. The iron mines of the district have the best safety record for that industry in the country as a whole, while the copper mines of the district
Jan 1, 1939
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Metal Mining - Mining Operations at the Teniente Mine of the Braden Copper Company, Rancagua, ChileBy F. E. Turton
THE town of Rancagua, at the junction of the state and Braden Copper Co. railroads, is located 82 km south of Santiago, the capital of Chile. From Rancagua 70 km to the east, situated in the Andes at
Jan 1, 1953
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Sampling And Estimating Cordilleran Silver-Lead Limestone Replacement DepositsBy Basil Prescott
A thorough knowledge of the peculiarities of this type of orebody is necessary in sampling these limestone replacement deposits. Oxidized ores are often overestimated because of error in determining s
Jan 3, 1924
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Water In Blister Copper Bars And PigsBy Albert Ledoux
SEVERAL years ago my firm was representing the Mt. Lyell Co. of Australia, which was shipping its blister copper to a refining works in the United States. After the contract had been running for many
Jan 10, 1922
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Institute of Metals Division - Solute Segregation During Cellular SolidificationBy J. J. Kramer, W. A. Tiller, G. F. Bolling
The temperatures of solid-liquid interfaces have been measured during the growth of Sn-Pb alloy crystals which exhibited a cellulur substructure. A simple descriptive theory was used in combination wi
Jan 1, 1963
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Institute of Metals Division - Discussion: Fracture of Zirconium and Zirconium-Hydrogen AlloysBy Frederick Forscher
Frederick Forscher (Nuclear Materials and Equipment Gorp.)—It is gratifying to see another series of experimental results that essentially reconfirms our reported observations of "Strain-Induced Hydro
Jan 1, 1965
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Papers - Reclaiming Steel-foundry Sands (With Discussion)By A. H. Dierker
Next to the metal itself, molding sand is the most important raw material used in the manufacture of steel castings. There are no accurate figures available but probably it would be safe to say that t
Jan 1, 1930
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Development of Rock Mass and Liner Stresses During Sinking of a Shaft in Clay ShaleBy P. K. Kaiser, C. Mackay
A circular shaft with a diameter of 6m was excavated by the conventional drilling and blasting method to a depth of 235m through 60m of glacial till, 1 Om of water bearing basal sand, 1 1 Om of clay s
Jan 1, 1983
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Effects Of Structure And Unsaturation Of Collector On Soap Flotation Of Iron OresBy Strathmore R. B. Cooke, Iwao Iwasaki, Hyung Sup Choi
Oleic acid is the chief ingredient of fatty acids used as collectors in nonsulfide flotation. With a few notable exceptions, the various quantities of saturated and other unsaturated acids comprising
Jan 9, 1959