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Industrial Minerals - Deposits of Heavy Minerals on the Brazilian CoastBy Joseph L. Gillson
BRAZIL has had an industry based on ocean beach deposits of heavy minerals containing monazite, zircon, rutile, and ilmenite for well over 40 years, but except at the very earliest period, prior to 19
Jan 1, 1951
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Institute of Metals Division - Metallurgy Behind the Decimal PointBy E. E. Schumacher
IN a laboratory devoted to the furtherance of the science of communication, the breadth and variety of the problems encountered are challenging to a metallurgist. In my own long association with the B
Jan 1, 1951
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Commercial Coal Car RatingBy WALTER M. DAKE
WITH the renewal of the contract between bituminous miners and operators, whereby a period of three years is assured without the devastating effect of irregularity of operation due to general strikes;
Jan 1, 1924
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Development of Muffle Furnaces for the Production of Zinc Oxide and Zinc at East Chicago, IndianaBy G. E. Johnson
The problem of efficient reclamation of zinc base die cast scrap became interesting early in 1930. Die Cast Metal, as referred to in this paper, is a zinc base alloy with various proportions of alumin
Jan 1, 1950
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Electrostatic Precipitation ? DiscussionGERARD B. ROSENBLATT,* Salt Lake City, Utah (written discussion?). -Mr. Eschholz attacks this problem from what appears to me to be the proper angle. He does not limit his viewpoint to the attainment
Jan 10, 1918
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Part VII - Papers - Superplasticity in Some Titanium and Zirconium AlloysBy W. A. Backofen, D. Lee
Tlze condition of superplasticity or neck-resistanl flow that results front high strain-rate sensitivity has been observed in isothermal tension tests on several titanium alloys and one of zirconium h
Jan 1, 1968
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Papers - Some Fundamentals of the Flow and Rupture of Metals (Annual Lecture) (T.P. 1335)By George Sachs
I deeply appreciate the honor of being selected to deliver the twentieth Annual Lecture of the Institute of Metals Division. The subject of my paper is extremely involved and voluminous, therefore
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Some Fundamentals of the Flow and Rupture of Metals (Annual Lecture) (T.P. 1335)By George Sachs
I deeply appreciate the honor of being selected to deliver the twentieth Annual Lecture of the Institute of Metals Division. The subject of my paper is extremely involved and voluminous, therefore
Jan 1, 1941
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The Assessment of the Susceptibility of Aluminum Alloys to Stress Corrosion ? with Discussion on Susceptibility of Aluminum AlloysBy F. A. Champion
The work described in this paper was carried out in the Research Laboratories of the British Aluminium Company Ltd., under the general direction of A. G. C. Gwyer, Scientific Manager of the Company.
Jan 1, 1945
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Preparation of Metallic Iron of High Purity (with Discussion page 1449)By G. A. Moore
A brief review is given of methods designed to produce metallic iron of high purity, and typical results are listed. A recent method, utilized at the National Bureau of Standards, consists of the extr
Jan 1, 1954
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An Analysis of the Casualties in the Anthracite Coal Mines, from 1871 to 1880By H. M. Chance
Asst. Geologist, Pennsylvania Geological Survey THE following tables have been compiled from the annual reports of the Inspectors of Mines, to determine the percentages of fatal and non-fatal casua
Jan 1, 1882
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Geological Survey of CaliforniaBy Walter W. Bradley, OLAF P. JENKINS
IN April of this year the California State Division of Mines (formerly known as the State Mining Bureau) observed its 50th anniversary. The Division serves as a bureau of information and, an encyclopa
Jan 1, 1930
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A Study Of Factors Influencing Grain Size In Magnesium Alloys And A Carbon Inoculation Method For Grain RefinementBy C. H. Mahoney, P. E. LeGrand, A. L. Tarr
MAGNESIUM, it is now generally realized, differs in some important aspects from most other structural metals, not excepting even its close neighbors, the aluminum-base alloys. This is particularly tru
Jan 1, 1945
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Papers - Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in Utah in 1937By C. E. Shoenfelt
Wildcat drilling operations in Utah in 1937 added nothing of importance to the commercial oil and gas possibilities of the state, and such operations consisted largely of efforts to reach objectives i
Jan 1, 1938
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Iron and Steel Division - Effect of the Rate of Rise of Rimming Steel in Molds on the Surface Quality of SlabsBy A. T. Peters
DURING an investigation concerning the use of large nozzles for pouring of low-carbon rimming steels, the practical details of which were reported elsewhere, it was noticed that increases of nozzl
Jan 1, 1960
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Heat-Treatment of Steels Containing Fifty Hundredths and Eighty Hundredths Per Cent of CarbonBy C. E. Corson
Discussion of the Paper by C. E. Corson, which was presented at the London Meeting, July, 1906. (See Bi-Monthly Bulletin, No. 11, September, pp. 725 to 742.) ALBERT SAUVEUR, Cambridge, Mass. (com
Jan 1, 1907
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Washington D.C. Paper - An Improved Mining Lamp for EngineersBy Persifor Frazer
The accompanying diagrams represent a lamp provided with certain improvements which render it more serviceable for the use of the engineer or other mining official who is often compelled to visit seve
Jan 1, 1882
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Temper Brittleness Of Plain Carbon SteelsBy Leonard D. Jaffe, Donald C. Buffum
THE importance of temper brittleness in alloy steels has long been realized in Europe, In the United States recognition of its importance has developed within the last several years. Many brittle fail
Jan 1, 1948
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Flotation Of Custom Lead-Zinc-Iron Ores As Practiced By The International Smelting Co.’s Tooele PlantBy W. J. McKenna
THE International Smelting Co. concentrator at Tooele, Utah, first operated on a custom basis for the treatment of lead-zinc-iron ores on Nov.' 1, 1924, with a capacity of 500 tons per day. On Ma
Jan 1, 1928
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Iron and Steel - Temper Brittleness of Plain Carbon Steels (Metals Tech., Dec. 1948, TP 2482)By L. D. Jaffe, D. C. Buffum
The importance of temper brittleness in alloy steels has long been realized in Europe. In the United States recognition of its importance has developed within the last several years. Many brittle fail
Jan 1, 1949