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Reservoir Engineering - An Experimental and Theoretical Investigation of Gravity Drainage PerformanceBy R. A. Morse, P. M. Bridges, L. E. Wilsey, Howard N. Hall, P. L. Terwilliger
Theoretical and experimental investigations of a constant pressure gravity drainage system are reported. Experimental data are presented to show that recovery to gas breakthrough by gravity drainage i
Jan 1, 1951
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Reservoir Engineering - An Experimental and Theoretical Investigation of Gravity Drainage PerformanceBy L. E. Wilsey, R. A. Morse, P. L. Terwilliger, Howard N. Hall, P. M. Bridges
Theoretical and experimental investigations of a constant pressure gravity drainage system are reported. Experimental data are presented to show that recovery to gas breakthrough by gravity drainage i
Jan 1, 1951
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Opportunity and Responsibility of the EngineerBy SAMUEL GOMPERS
THE name engineer makes a very strong appeal to one who appreciates the mechanism underlying the fabric of our civilization. Engineers are scouts of civilization. We send them ahead into the lone &apo
Jan 1, 1921
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Metal Mining - A Graphic Statistical History of the Joplin or Tri-State Lead-Zinc DistrictBy John S. Brown
IN 1925 the writer undertook a detailed statistical study of all producing areas in the Joplin district as a basis for evaluating programs and measuring objectives. For this purpose, the published fig
Jan 1, 1952
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Pilot-Plant Development of a Sulfation Process for Complex Sulfide OresBy J. A. Morgan, R. E. Lund, D. E. Warnes
The design, operation, and performance of an integrated pilot plant for recovering zinc and copper from a complex sulfide ore are described. Metallurqical processing comprised selective sulfate roasti
Jan 1, 1962
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Papers - Copper and Brass - Hardness Changes Accompanying the Ordering of Beta Brass.By Cyril Stanley Smith
BeTa brass (consisting of approximately equal atomic proportions of copper and zinc) exists as a random solid solution at high temperatures, hut at low temperature< an ordered structure is stable,
Jan 1, 1943
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Papers - Copper and Brass - Hardness Changes Accompanying the Ordering of Beta Brass.By Cyril Stanley Smith
BeTa brass (consisting of approximately equal atomic proportions of copper and zinc) exists as a random solid solution at high temperatures, hut at low temperature< an ordered structure is stable,
Jan 1, 1943
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Reef Prospecting By The Resistivity Method In UgandaBy H. J. R. Way
THE work to be described was undertaken at various periods from 1937 to 1939 on the Busia gold field, in the eastern province of Uganda. It was decided to examine the possibility of reef prospection b
Jan 1, 1944
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Colorado Paper - The Microstructure of Steel and the Current Theories of HardeningBy Albert Sauveur
To understand this paper properly, the reader must have a clear conception of what is meant by the " critical points " of iron and steel; * and in order to avoid the necessity of tedious references to
Jan 1, 1897
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Francis B. Foley - Chairman, Iron and Steel Division, A. I. M. E.By AIME AIME
SHORTLY after graduation from Girard College, Francis B. Foley found employment in the open-hearth department of The Midvale Steel Co. later joining its research department. After twelve years with Mi
Jan 1, 1937
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Mine VentilationTWO very interesting sessions on mine ventilation were held on Monday. George S. Rice, chairman of the Mine Ventilation Committee, presided at the morn-ing session. Formal reports from two subcommitte
Jan 3, 1928
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Reservoir Engineering–General - Imbibition Oil Recovery from Fractured, Water-Drive ReservoirBy J. R. Kyte, C. C. Mattax
Previous workers have developed differential equations to describe oil displacement by water imbibition, but have not explicitly defined the relationship between recovery behavior for a single reservo
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Copper and Copper Alloys - The Kappa Eutectoid Transformation in the Copper-silicon System (Metals Tech., Sept. 1948, TP 2441)By W. P. Saunders, W. R. Hibbard, G. H. Eichelman
Interest in the various products of the austenite eutectoid transformation in iron-carbon alloys, particularly as produced by the isothermal sub-critical techniques introduced by Davenport and Bain,&a
Jan 1, 1949
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Baltimore Paper - The Great Blast at GlendonBy Ellis Clark
During the winter of 1877-78 the Glendon Iron Company, by the advice of the superintendent, Mr. Frank Firmstone, decided to make the experiment of exploding a heavy blast of gunpowder in their limesto
Jan 1, 1879
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Division Lectures - The 1963 Extractive Metallurgy Lecture; The Production of Reactive Metals - Retrospect and ProspectBy L. M. Pidgeon
The reactive metals are above manganese on the electromotive series. Their compounds are characterized by large heats of formation and they cannot be reduced from their ores by classical methods. Thre
Jan 1, 1963
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Effects of Inclusion Streaks on the Tensile and Dynamic Properties of Wrought Iron and Similar MaterialsBy F. R. Hensel
THE demand for clean steel is increasing daily. New processes of refining steel are being developed in order to remove all nonmetallic inclusions as completely as possible, as it is the general opinio
Jan 1, 1932
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Calculation Of Theoretical Productivity FactorBy M. Muskat, H. H. Evinger
A METHOD has been developed whereby one may calculate the productivity factors of producing formations from a knowledge of the reservoir conditions. Account is taken not only of the heterogeneous char
Jan 1, 1941
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Abstracts of Papers Presented in Drill Steel Sessions New York Meeting - Drill-steel SharpeningBy Clarence M. Haight
The general practice in drill sharpening shops, of which descriptions have been written, is about as follows: The bit is heated to 1600" to 1900°F. Then when forged to the proper shape and size in the
Jan 1, 1922
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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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New York Paper - A Laboratory Study of the Stages in the Refining of Copper (Discussion, p. 984)By R. B. Yerxa, C. F. Green, H. O. Hofman
MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY, In refining copper, the metal is melted down in a reverbera tory furnace in a more or less oxidizing atmosphere and then further subjected to an oxidizing
Jan 1, 1904