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St. Louis Paper - A Review of the Exploration at Belle Isle, Louisiana (with Discussion)By A. F. Lucas
Belle Isle, located in the low sea marshes near Atchafalaya Bay, is the southeasternmost of the famous Five Salt Islands of Louisiana. Rising about 80 ft. (24 m.) above the level of the surrounding ma
Jan 1, 1918
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Institute of Metals Division - The Segregation of Tantalum in Iron in a Levitating Zone MelterBy B. F. Oliver
Equilibrium and kinetic segregation coefficients for the dilute high-temperature system tantalum in iron have been experimentally determined in a levitating zone melter. The equilibrium segregation co
Jan 1, 1964
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Geolgy - The Role of the Geologist in the Development of the Labrador-Quebec Iron Ore DistrictBy A. E. Moss, J. K. Gustafson
MEASURED in terms of ore tonnage, the New Quebec and Labrador iron ore fields promise to rank with the greatest iron ore districts of the world. Over 400 million tons of high-grade ore for direct ship
Jan 1, 1954
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Research and Educational Facilities at the University of AlabamaBy James R. Cudworth
ENGINEERING has been taught at the University of Alabama for over a hundred years. The School of Mining and Metallurgy was authorized by the Board of Trustees in 1887 and four students were graduated
Jan 12, 1950
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Petroleum Economics - Chronological Aspects of American Oil-reserve Replenishment, with a Note on the Contemporary SituationBy H. J. Wasson
Published literature regarding the nation's oil reserve has been largely concerned with the estimated quantities in sight in known producing fields. This proved reserve has never been large in re
Jan 1, 1937
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Determination Of The Temperature And Pressure Of Formation Of Minerals By The Decrepitometric MethodBy F. Gordon Smith
ALTHOUGH several geological indicators of the critical type are known, including quartz inversions and decomposition of hydrous minerals such as serpentine, there are very few of the general type. Sol
Jan 1, 1952
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Papers - The Environment of Ore BodiesBy Edward Wisser
The environment of an ore body is taken to mean not only its physical surroundings but every factor, passive or active, that conditioned the ore shoot, saving only the original composition of the solu
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - The Environment of Ore BodiesBy Edward Wisser
The environment of an ore body is taken to mean not only its physical surroundings but every factor, passive or active, that conditioned the ore shoot, saving only the original composition of the solu
Jan 1, 1941
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Boston Paper - A Comparison of the Eozoic and Lower Palaeozoic in South Wales with their Appalachian AnaloguesBy Persifor Frazer
The '(author's edition" of the following paper, "subject to re vision," was received by him, and copies sent to Professor Geikie and others about two weeks before the date of the meeting at
Jan 1, 1883
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Ventilation Of The Liberty Tunnels At PittsburghBy Louis Huber
THE Liberty tunnels extend through a very steep hill in Pittsburgh (locally called Mount Washington) for a distance of slightly over a mile. The two tunnels parallel each other and are 59 ft. apart, c
Jan 1, 1927
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The Determination Of Grain Size In MetalsBy Zay Jeffries
Discussion of the paper of ZAY JEFFRIES, A. H. KLINE and E. B. ZIMMER, presented at the New York meeting, February, 1916, and printed in Bulletin No. 108, December, 1915, pp. 2359 to 2369. ZAY JEFFRI
Jan 5, 1916
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The Gravity Meter in Underground ProspectingBy William Allen
For the past six years gravity surveys have been used for underground prospecting in the copper mines at Bisbee, Ariz. The primary purpose of the surveys has been to reduce the diamond drilling an
Mar 1, 1956
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Institute of Metals Division - On the Rate of Loss of Hydrogen From Cylinders of Iron and SteelBy P. K. Foster, C. M. Payne, A. McNabb
Some measurements of the rate of loss of hydrogen from cylinders of iron and steel are analyzed in terrns of a trapping theory. The apeement is encozcraging and gives rise to estimates for the density
Jan 1, 1965
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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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Miscellaneous Metals and Alloys - The Hardness of Silver-antimony Solid Solutions (Metals Technology, Oct. 1944)By J. H. Frye, R. M. Treco
One of the chief hindrances to an understanding of the hardness of solid solutions is the sparsity of suitable hardness data. There is great need of a large body of hardness data obtained from many di
Jan 1, 1945
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Institute of Metals Division - The Kinetics of Creep During Hot Pressing of Loose Silver-Powder AggregatesBy F. V. Lenel, G. S. Ansell, M. J. Salkind
An experiment is described in which the growth of interparticle necks in an array of loose spherical silver powder at temperatures near 300°C was determined by measuring changes in the electrical resi
Jan 1, 1965
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PART IV - Papers - Surface Layer Effects on the Plastic Deformation of Iron and MolybdenumBy I. R. Kramer
The stress associated with the surface layer was deter-minedfor iron and molybdcnum. These measurements show that the surface layer plays a very important role in the plastic deformation of bcc metals
Jan 1, 1968
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Pittsburg Paper - The Magnetic Separation of Non-Magnetic Material (see Discussion 1089)By H. A. J. Wilkens, H. B. C. Nitze
At the Atlanta meeting of the Institute in October,' 1895, some brief remarks were made by Mr. Wilkens on the above subject. It is the object of this paper to set forth the substance of these pre
Jan 1, 1897
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Production - Domestic - Petroleum Development in Michigan and the “Trenton Rock” Fields of Northwestern Ohio and Northern Indiana 1931 (With Discussion)By M. G. Gulley
The drilling for and production of crude oil in the Lima-Indiana and Michigan fields were directly and profoundly affected by the severe strain to which the petroleum industry was subjected during the
Jan 1, 1932
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New York Paper - The Formation and Distribution of Residual Iron OresBy C. L. Dake
Residual deposits occur both as products of weathering and as products of hydrothermal decay. Products of Weathering That climatic conditions affect greatly both the rate and the results of weat
Jan 1, 1916