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Pittsburg Paper - Heats of Formation of Some Ferro-Calcic SilicatesBy C. Y. Wen, H. O. Hofman
In casting a thermal balance of the heat generated and absorbed in a blast-furnace treating lead-, copper- and similar non-ferrous ores, assumptions have always to be made for the values of the heat o
Jan 1, 1911
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Embrittlement Of Copper By Hot Reducing GasesBy T. S. Fuller
VARIOUS phases of the embrittlement of solid copper containing oxygen by the action of reducing gases at high temperatures through the work of many experimenters are familiar to readers of metallurgic
Jan 2, 1926
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Mining Engineering REPORTER (d3818520-5e0c-4165-ae6e-de26f3ae39b4)• "This country eventually may have to rely on foreign sources for some metals, not because it does not have them here but because it may have difficulty getting the labor to mine them. Few people rea
Jan 6, 1950
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Biographical NoticesALEXANDER BRYDEN Alexander Bryden, clean of engineers in the anthracite mining field, and a member of the pioneer Pittston family, was claimed by death Wednesday, September 26, 1917. The announcement
Jan 12, 1917
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New York Paper - Operation of Blast-furnace Plant of Columbia Steel Corpn. at Ironton, Utah (with Discussion)By W. R. Phibbs
The blast furnace of the Columbia Steel Corpn., at Ironton, Utah, was put in blast April 30, 1024, and its operation has presented some interesting problems. The coke for the furnace is furnished by 3
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Friendly Possibilities of Engineering SocietiesEngineers and masters of enterprise are waking fast to the realization that there is something more in the relations of employer and employee than mechanical output, which can be measured mathematical
Jan 1, 1919
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Improvements and Present Practice in Blasting ExplosivesBy Walter C. Holmes
IN the recently published book entitled "Man in a Chemical World," by A. Cressy Morrison, the several pages discussing explosives were included in the chapter on "Serving Industry." Such a classificat
Jan 1, 1938
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Institute of Metals Division - The Effects of Irradiation upon MetalsBy F. Seitz
STAFF: Editor, Gerhard Derge Carnegie Institute of Technology Schenley Park Pittsburgh 13, Pa. Editorial Assistant, M. A. Redmerski Managing Editor, James J. Burke THE METALLURGICA
Jan 1, 1960
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American E. F. University at BeuneThe following letter has been received from Prof. Alfred C. Lane, of Tufts College, who is now in charge of the department, of mining in the College of Engineering, American E. F. University, Beaune,
Jan 7, 1919
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Technical Design of Autogenous MillsBy Robert C. Meaders, Arthur R. MacPherson
Many attempts have been made to eliminate most of the crushing plant and all the grinding plant in the process of ore beneficiation by substituting a combined crushing and grinding unit which could ta
Jan 9, 1964
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Coal and Coke Utilization as It Affects US Trade Relations (or the Expanded Role of Coal in World Trade)By W. W. Mason
The US began exporting coal in the late 1800s, at first in very small quantities to Canada and, beginning in 1897 and 1898, to the east coast of South America. Shipments to European countries began on
Jan 1, 1982
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California's Mineral Resources for War PurposesThe State Mining Bureau of California under the direction of Fletcher Hamilton, State Mineralogist, is starting a field campaign to report on the economic minerals of California, which have an importa
Jan 6, 1917
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Large Diameter Mine Shaft Construction Using A Rodless Boring MachineBy A. G. Raine
For the technological age in which we live, with the constant goal of further improvement in the efficiency of mechanized systems, the need for a replacement of the antiquated drill and blast method o
Jan 1, 1984
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The 27th EngineersThe 27th Regiment of Engineers was organized in the Army not long ago for special mining service at the front (or, we might even say, in advance of the front). In military engineering in warfare, the
Jan 3, 1918
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Mining - Block Caving Practice at the Jeffrey MineBy H. H. Waller, D. L. Monroe, D. P. R. Smyth
ORIGINALLY slusher drift development was conventional, advancing the drift full 10x13-ft size at 6 ft per round. This proved dangerous and costly because the weak fractured rock of the orebody cannot
Jan 1, 1955
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Blasthole Mining At GecoBy G. M. T. Marshall
Plans to bring the Geco Mines property in Manitouwadge, Ont., into production began in 1954. At that time over 12 million tons of copper-zinc ore were indicated in a zone 2700 ft long. A concentrating
Jan 8, 1959
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Institute of Metals Division - Studies of Slugs from Explosives with Lined Cavities; I (TN)By A. Soundraraj, S. Singh, R. C. Deshpande
THE detonation of a high-explosive charge having a metal-lined conical cavity (shaped charge) results in a fast-moving jet and a slow-moving slug.1-4 Clark and Bruckner reported the metallographic stu
Jan 1, 1960
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Control Of Autogenous Grinding CircuitsBy H. R. Peterson
The control of autogenous grinding circuits is very similar to the control of conventional grinding circuits. In both circuits the classifier must be operated to achieve the required degree of mineral
Jan 1, 1982
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Physical Properties of Nickel - Discussion (e6d4169b-026f-4144-b6a5-7b036c747f96)J. L. JONES,* Pittsburgh, Pa.-If a nickel anode is cast under commer-cial conditions, will it contain nickel oxide? Will the nickel oxide affect the rate of corrosion in a double sulfate solution; or
Jan 12, 1919
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Papers - Grinding - Crushing and Grinding Practice, Tennessee Copper Company (Mining Technology, May 1940.) (with discussion)By F. M. Lewis, J.F. Myers
The Tennessee Copper Company's operations are in the Ducktown Basin, in the extreme southeast corner of Tennessee. The ore is of the heavy sulphide type, the predominating sulphides being pyrite,
Jan 1, 1943