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Factors Influencing Mineral Land Values for Assessment PurposesBy R. Laird Auchmuty
A NUMBER of factors, of varying importance, should be considered in assessing mineral land-here specifically coal land -for tax purposes. (1) Is the coal developed or un- developed'! (2) If u
Jan 1, 1939
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Geophysical Exploration - Further Studies on Coastal Structure - Wider Governmental Interest The Gravimeter in the Oil Fields Practical Aid to Ore DrillingBy Sherwin F. Kelly
FRONTIERS of geological knowledge retreated further this past year before an ever-widening geophysical attack, as governments and endowed institutions continued to take an increasing practical interes
Jan 1, 1939
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Plenty of Oil for National DefenseBy JOHN R. SUMAN
OVERWHELMING proof of the importance of oil in a modern national economy is afforded by the present European War. Treat¬ies and national boundaries have been cynically violated to secure greater supp
Jan 1, 1941
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The Hollenback Shaft, Lehigh And Wilkes-Barre Coal Company, Luzerne County, Pa.By John Henry Harden
THIS shaft, located in the northern anthracite coal-field about 2300 feet southwest from the court-house at Wilkes-Barre, in the County of Luzerne, Pa., is the property of the Lehigh & Wilkes¬Barre Co
Jan 1, 1877
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The Investigations Of Fuels And Structural Materials By The Technologic Branch Of The United States Geological Survey.*By Joseph A. Holmes
I. INTRODUCTORY. THE plans for the investigation of fuels and structural materials now being conducted by the Technologic Branch of the United States Geological Survey were, before being decided upon
Jan 7, 1908
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Increasing the Extraction of Oil - Ten Years' Application of Compressed Air at Hamilton Corners Pa., with Core Studies of the Producing Sand (with Discussion)By C. R. Fettke
In 1914, the officials of the Brundred Oil Corpn., faced with the problem of introducing new methods to increase production in the old and nearly depleted pools of Venango County, became interested in
Jan 1, 1928
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Buffalo Paper - A Differential Regenerative Hot-Blast Stove and its Application to an Open- Hearth Blast-Furnace.By Jacob T. Wainwright
This stove has been designed to meet the requirements of a fur nave that must be operated with either a reducing or a neutral flame ; and more particularly to make feasible the operating of re duction
Jan 1, 1889
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Notes on the Heat Treatment of High-Speed Steel Tools (0bd4ba66-f13b-42e7-9997-22fb1d86722d)HENRY M. HOWE, Bedford Hills, N. T. (communication to the Secretary?).-The authors valuable results as to the effects of the air-hardening temperature on high-speed steel may be summed up thus: Influ
Jan 6, 1917
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Postwar Accumulation of Mineral Stock PilesBy C. K. Leith
THE resolution presented at the Annual Meeting of the A.I.M.E., calling on Congress to provide now for postwar accumulation of mineral stock piles under Government control, expresses, I think, the nea
Jan 1, 1943
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Reservoir Engineering – Laboratory Research - Process Variables of In Situ CombustionBy John N. Dew, William L. Martin, `
This paper describes the results of a laboratory investigation conducted to obtain data for an evaluation of the in situ combustion process as a method of producing crude oil from reservoirs. Air and
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Copper ReductionBy C. R. Kuzell
IN COMPARISON with recent years 1932 has yielded much less tangible evidence of progress in copper reduction and refining. The industry has been extremely quiet, especially in the United States. Desig
Jan 1, 1933
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Air Cooling to Prevent Falls of Roof RockBy J. H. Fletcher
AIR has been cooled, heated, washed; humidified and dehumidified for many purposes and in many industries. At a number of metal mines air is conditioned to reduce the high humidity and unbearable heat
Jan 1, 1931
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Chilex Mine Model RevisedAPPROXIMATELY 26 percent of the total ore production to date from the largest single deposit of copper-bearing material in the world was mined during the war years, 1942 to 1945, at Chile Exporation C
Jan 1, 1948
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California Paper - The Mines and Mill of the Atacama Mineral Company, Ltd., Taltal, ChileBy Sidney H. Loram
As the work carried on by this Company, of which the writer has been in charge for the past two years, is somewhat unique, the following account of it may be of interest, and, on that account, is offe
Jan 1, 1900
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Mine Subsidence Problems in MichiganBy AIME AIME
A STUDY of subsidence and ground movement in the copper and iron mines of the upper peninsula of Michigan has been made by W. R. Crane of the United States Bureau of Mines and published as Bulletin 29
Jan 1, 1929
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Rare Metals and Minerals - Splitting of Uranium Atom Mort Important Development of the YearBy Zay Jeffries
A SURVEY of rare metals and minerals for the past year places uranium as one of two partners, the other being the neutron, in what historians will probably say is the greatest discovery in physics at
Jan 1, 1940
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Lead Refined Electrolytically at the East Chicago PlantBy F. C. Smyers, E. W. Merrick
ALTHOUGH the zinc and pyrite concentrates produced at Midvale go to other companies, the United States Smelting Refining and Mining Company smelts and refines its own lead. Refining is the first step
Jan 1, 1948
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Reservoir Engineering - General - Estimating the Combustion Drive Air Requirements by Back-Flowing an Injection Well in the Delaware-Childers FieldBy J. C. Todd
The volume of air needed to move the combustion wave through each acre-foot of the reservoir is a very important quantity for engineering economic analyses. A new method, which involves backflowing th
Jan 1, 1970
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Some Aspects of Workmen's Compensation Law AdministrationBy F. Robertson Jones
IF the tendency toward extending the scope of the workmen's compensation system to include life, health, accident, old age, and unemployment insurance for workers is not promptly altered, I belie
Jan 1, 1934
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Chloridizing Mill of the Standard Reduction Co.By H. P. Allen
THE chloridizing mill of the Standard Reduction Co. is located about 75 miles south of Salt Lake City on the Tintic branch of the Denver & Rio Grande Western R. R. and 12 miles from the Tintic Standar
Jan 8, 1925