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A User Friendly Groundwater Model For Assessing Probable Hydrologic Consequences And Cumulative Hydrologic Impacts Of Surface Mining OperationsBy Thomas J. Pike, Keith G. Kirk, Mark F. Weider, Lawrence E. Welborn
As part of the mine permitting process as delegated by the Surface Mining Reclamation and Control Act of 1977 the regulatory authority must assess the probable hydrologic consequences and cumulative h
Jan 1, 1983
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Institute of Metals Division - Mechanical Behavior of Lamellar (Al-CuAl2) and Whisker Type (Al-Al3Ni) Unidirectionally-Solidified Eutectic AlloysBy R. W. Hertzberg, F. D. Lemkey, J. A. Ford
The technique of unidirectional solidification has been applied to the A1-AI3Ni and A1-CuAl2 ezltectic alloy systems; the controlled microstructure of A1-A3Ni consists of parallel A13Ni whiskers emhed
Jan 1, 1965
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An Overview Of Longwall Unit Operations Impact On ProductionBy William Laird
The predominent method of coal mining in the United States for years has been room-and-pillar mining. The reason for this has been the advantages of room-and- pillar method which is a relatively flexi
Jan 1, 1981
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An Improvement in ClassifiersBy AIME AIME
AN entirely new type of classifier is being put on the market by The Dorr Co., following three years of development and the experimental use of thirty machines of the improvement design in various par
Jan 1, 1937
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Manganese Dioxide-Sulfuric Acid Oxidation of MolybdeniteBy Roshan B. Bhappu, Ronald J. Roman, Dexter H. Reynolds
The reaction between manganese dioxide and molybdenite in a water- sulfuric acid medium was studied at atmospheric pressure and from 25° to 103°C. Both solids are dissolved to give, as final products
Jan 1, 1965
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Big Hole River Plant"Located on the Big Hole River, three miles from Divide, Montana, and 21.75 miles from Butte.Built in 1899.DAM: Rock-filled wooden crib, 512 ft. long and 57.5 feet high.SPILLWAY: Equipped with flash-b
Jan 1, 1913
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Arc Melting of Titanium MetalBy S. F. Radtke, J. A. Snyder, R. M. Scriver
An automatic, continuous casting arc furnace employing a nonconsum-able electrode and a direct current arc has been constructed and operated successfully for titanium. A comparison of the properties o
Jan 1, 1952
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Papers - - Production - Domestic - Developments in the California Oil Industry during the Year 1933By H. W. Miller, V. H. Wilhem
Although the year 1933 was a period of uncertainty, considerable new development was initiated, with a high percentage of favorable results, for owing to financial conditions only projects of merit we
Jan 1, 1934
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Mining Methods ? Manufacturers Are Offering Many Improvements in Equipment, Thus Lowering Operating CostsBy Lucien Eaton
INCREASED mining activity during the past year has brought to light changes in mining practice and advances in technique, born and incubated in the period of depression from which the mining industry
Jan 1, 1937
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A Geologist's Plea for More Freedom in PublicationBy Yeatman, Pope
FOR many years geologists have felt that mining companies should adopt a more liberal policy in the publication of their reports. The increasing usefulness of the geologist to the mining profession in
Jan 1, 1938
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Reservoir Engineering–Laboratory Research - The Use of a Viscous Slug To Improve Waterflood Efficiency In a Reservoir Partially Invaded by Bottom WaterBy A. L. Barnes
A number of reservoirs have been partially invaded by bottom water. Water flooding such reservoirs can be especially inefficient if the oil has a high viscosity because injected water will under-run t
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Work of Prospectors and Geologist: ReviewedBy AIME AIME
MINING geology was granted two sessions, Wednesday morning and afternoon, Feb. 17. The morning session, at which H. Foster Bain presided. first considered Paul M. Tyler's paper, "Economic Notes o
Jan 1, 1932
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Pittsburg International Session October, 1890 Paper - The Progress of German Practice in the Metallurgy of Iron and Steel since 1876, with Special Reference to the Basic ProcessesBy Hermann Wedding
It is now fourteen years since we German ironmasters, in considerable number, visited the United States on the occasion of the Philadelphia Exposition, and found the iron metallurgy of this country, a
Jan 1, 1891
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Equilibrium Relations In Aluminum-Magnesium-Zinc Alloys Of High PurityBy William Fink
THIS paper is the nineteenth of a series from the Aluminum Research Laboratories, presenting the results of the investigations of equilibrium relations in aluminum-base alloys made from electrolytical
Jan 1, 1936
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Some Recent Investigations with the Dutch State Mines Cyclone Separator on Fine Coal SlurriesBy S. A. Falconer
This paper deals with the practical application of the Dutch State Mines cyclone separator for fine-coal cleaning. The more important operating variables are discussed, and results of a number of cont
Jan 7, 1950
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Institute of Metals Division - Creep of Al-Cu Alloys During Age HardeningBy Ervin E. Underwood
IT has been recognized for many years that dis-persed particles have great value in raising the creep resistance of metallic alloys. In fact, some of the most successful high-temperature alloys owe th
Jan 1, 1958
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Minerals Beneficiation - Reduction and Magnetic Separation of Manganiferous Iron Ores by the R-N ProcessBy N. F. Schulz, H. A. Lex
Representative samples of typical manganiferous iron ores from the Cuyuna Range, Minn., were reduced to the metallic iron state at temperatures just short of fusion with an excess of coke in the manne
Jan 1, 1969
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Water-Cooled Equipment For Open-Hearth Steel Furnaces - Discussion (d53bc1d6-38b6-4ac3-bced-db74f1c90ca3)ROBERT M. KEENEY,* Portsmouth, Ohio (written discussion?).- Mr. Coffin has written a most interesting paper that covers most of the uses to which water-cooled devices are subjected; but to meet with
Jan 6, 1919
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New York Paper - Forms of Sulfur in Coke, and Their Relations to Blast-furnace Reactions (with Discussion)By S. P. Kinney
Sulfur has been one of the most troublesome elements encountered since the earliest days of iron smelting, and this problem will become of increasing importance as the higher sulfur coke is used, beca
Jan 1, 1923
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New York Paper - Forms of Sulfur in Coke, and Their Relations to Blast-furnace Reactions (with Discussion)By S. P. Kinney
Sulfur has been one of the most troublesome elements encountered since the earliest days of iron smelting, and this problem will become of increasing importance as the higher sulfur coke is used, beca
Jan 1, 1923